Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 25, Plymouth, Marshall County, 24 March 1910 — Page 7

i Back An aching back is instantlyrelieved by an application of Sloan's LinimentThis liniment takes the place of massage and is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates without rubbing through the skin and muscular tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent as well as temporary relief. Here's the Proof. Mr. James C. Lbz, of ltoo 9th St 8.E., Washington, D.C.,writ8 : "Thirty j ears ago 1 1 ell from a. scaffold and nervously injured my back. I nilered terribly at tiroes ; from th mall of my back all around my stomach was just as If I had been beaten with a club. 1 used Tery plaster I could get with no relief. Sloan's Liniment took the pain right out, and I can now do as much ladder work as asy man in the shop, thanks to loans Liniment Mr. J. P. Evass, of ML Airy, Ga., says: "After being aSllcted for three years with rheumatism, I used Sloan's Liniment, and was cured sound and well, and am glad to say I haren't been troubled with rheumatism since. My leg was badly swollen from my hip to my knee. One-half a bottle took the pain and swelling out. Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia or.' any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Bdcs,25c,50caoiS1.CO SImmsb book horses, cattle, sneep. sl Itrr seas free AdcU-e. liClKn.'U Dr. Earl S. SIsia, Eoston. Msss.. U.SA ÜESTEOtl GOLIADA Senator Dclliver, of Iowa, says: i "The stream f tairranN from the United States tr CaoAdH will continue benator Uollner Tcently ri'l a visit to esu -n LanuUa. and says; "lhfre is a lenl hunirrr in the hearts of l.m 1 ppi'bkinK ot'le; this will a count for ;he removal of so many Iowa farmers t Canada. Our peopl are plpaiwrl wttlx Its timTrmnfnt and the C'lcelh nt administration cf law. and they are corainn to you ia tens of thnnranna, and tfc-y are tili com ine.Iowa -TitrlhnU'd lartrc ly tothwliMUMJArnertcsm t armors v Lo iuule C nnada tlielr liomo durlnc ISJO'J. 1 leltl crop returns alone diirlngrycararidttl totheweuJth cf txiecountry upwards of Si 817 70,000,000.00 Grain Frowine, mixed farmin?, rnttle raUln( and dairying aro nil profitable. l-'ree llome-ntmii-t f lao acrra are to be hal la til" very l-t UlMrlot. 160 arre preemption at S3.UO per arro within -ertain areas, frrhnnl! and rhun be In errr rMknifnt, climate umxrellrl. soll t he rh lisi.noxl, water and building material plentiful. r'or particulars as to location, low settler' rniiwav rates and dew-rip-tive illustrated pamphlet. "1m Btit Vet," and other information, write to Sap's of Immigratino. Ottawa. Canada, or to the following- Canadian Oor't Afnf: W. H. Hnffrs, Sd Hxr Tratti-m- Terminal Building. Indiana polt. Ind.. an.l H. H. William, Kra , Law liulldmg. Toledu, Ohl. ( : e address nearest you). Flmae say where 70a caw this advertisement. . 7s CHALTFCLRS, DRIVERS 4RCPXIR MEN EARN BIG SALARIES tiO to ISO rnWtrk tb. rtnl Fay. Uara Tal. Ttjiug Trad WE WAST RESIDENT AGENTS ET EKT WHERE TV) yon want t i beeorno our aernt. and make from II t-' to t's por week during jrourvpare t ime I We will par yon literal fouiia.xKlon on all Mies of Autos. Auto &uppllfln. t artaaxxl Arn. 1 Tie ana lit you for the Automobile BuKlness by fi'ini y'i a Complete Corre'FREE spoodeace tourwln Aatomoblllos; Our Coarne it Intensely InterentlnE. easily learned and SJKLartuu4, acd ruf uaaij iiluauatxi IB deWtl oj biua rmta. OUR PROPOSITIOMrertTper acrimulari vnli vtdeo.da.Non- part icipatinc.i inly 6 nharea attlOp4rahareln nwetwary toquntify as iwldent acent ao1 obtain our Complete Cour k ltEt Otbrrvaak iO without any return or Inrertment vo your money. Ws offer y no an I nteret In a soil paving buoineaa. and a flns opportunity for maklns BIO MoSEY while yon study. Flr.t Course Is sent opoo receipt of payment for flrvt share of atock. I'art payment accepted. Writ to-day voile your territory is open, imiy a limited amount left, ATLAS AUTO SUPPLY CO. gJO te feJO East 4Sri SU CHICAGO, ILIa 0 Va, is the word to remember vhen you used a remedy f'rCoycHs6 'You Inidoor eoole must give the bowels help. Your choice must lie between harsh physic and candy Cascarcts. Harshness makes the bowels callous, so you need increasing doses. Cascarets do just as much, but in a gentle way. Vest-porVet box. 15 cer.ts-at dme-sfores. 51 Each tablet of the fceuiu? Li market! C C C. Lat as do your Printing using - - Eagle g: Eagle Xtäi-y . Linen ' to fmr ytur offlcm stationery. You can gmt thm paper and mnvtlopes to match. I I U IS It U SA, rssl Alt. Takm mm mtmr. , M 1 D VI 1 11 n Cbea pest and Itest Farm Iii All I L Ail U 'r purpose. iinii i tnii w $( J)Cr ucre. Two crops ler year. Miltl. heal thfiil climate. U. C. lKi;V, t4ili!4biirjr. Maryland. PATENTS Wstios E.fwlemaa,Wal. iaCton.U.C rh!Okfree. liiicht rtiertnces. Best result. I! abided Yih Sore Eyes, bsc

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Colds

For the SI. in am! rr.Tp. r.eoause of its m lu-nte. ci:iol!iont. sanative, antioittic pro;);'nirs dorivca from Cittu'iiru O.'ii r-u nt. uuUril v. ith tho p'.irti of (!o.inin:4 incv.'uica's anil most rofreMr.nu i;J llov.i-r o.Iors, Ciit' ura Soap is inirivaleil for preserv in. purifyiiis anil beautify inc: tho skin, scalp, hair and hands, and. assisted by Cuticura Ointment, for dispelling itching, irritation and inflammation and preventing clogging of the pores, the cause of many disfiguring facial eruptions. All who delight in a clear skin, soft, white hands, a clean, wholesome scalp, and live, glossy hair, will find that Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment realize every expectation. Cuticura Remedies are soli! throughout the world. Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., sole proprietors, Boston, Mass. Send to them for the latest Cuticura Book, an authority on the best care of the skin, scalp, hair and hands. It is mailed free on request. Parkn In Arw York. The State of Xev York is very well supplied with parks. In his recent message Governor Hughes said: "The State's total holdings in the Adirondack and Catskill mountains now amount to 1,641,51:3 acres, of which 52,549 acres were required during the

past year. The area of the proposed Adirondack Park is 3,313,5t-1 acres, and that of the proposed Catskill Park 576,120 acres, making a total of 3.S9,6S4 acres. When it is completed the Adirondack Park will le larger than the Yellowstone, which has 2,142,170 acres. Mrs. Smith's Hired Girl. Mrs. Smith is lucky. She has kept a servant for three years, and although the girl has horn offered more money elsewhere she won't leave Mrs. Smith. The girl does all the washing, scrubs the floors, does up the lace curtains. a::d even washes the bedding. People v.-on der why s.he stays at Mrs. Smith's and do?s so much more work than other girls can be induced to do. until they leari? that Mrs. Smith buys Easy Task lai Irr soap, which does onehalf the -rk and makes the other half cask Sand is the curse of Portuguese rZast Africa. It blocks the rivers and harbors and stretches in a vjast se.i toward the interior, effectually cutting off the coast towns from the highlands. J'.esides, it makes the problem of transportation the bugiear of the planter. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Tellets cure constipation. Constipation is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. Easy to ta!:a. ' Italy levies a graduated income tax as well as a direct tax on land and ho-.ises. Smaller incomes are exempt frm ta;.ation. The minister of finance ostimatrs that the income tax for this year will amount to about $49.600.000, while the land tax will bring in ?36,C00.000. TO CirnE A COLI) IX 0R DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO Cuinine TabU-ta. Drutrists refund money if it fails to cure. E. V.'. GROVE'S signature is on each bux. 2Sc In a new French Wdsbach mantle the rare oxides are consolidated in an electric furnace, greatly increasing resistance .to shocks, tremors and draughts. A TKIFLING COr!II will become s permanent onn unless slopped. AUt.it Lung Iiahain will sorely stop it. A 2sc bottle is la rpe enough for taa.t. bold at all dniK-2ists.Äc,5üc and 11.00 boUlcs. To sum up in percentage the six leading cereals show a yield of 7.6 per cent greater than last year, and only i per cent below the sum of the record years In each. When von buy bluing Insist on retting i:i!ss bleaching bine. ,lnn't tak? a cheap imitation. lc at grocers. PAKIS EAGPICKERS. An Occupation That Is Passed Along From Father to Son. The ragpickers of Paris are born to their work, the occupation being passed from father to son for generations. Each ragpicker family has its own district, which is inherited by tlje children and grandchildren. In spite of all the progress made In modern and elegant Paris barrels of waste are piled up on the streets in front of many buildings on beautiful boulevards in the early morning hours, and it 13 the privilege and In fact the mission of the ragpickers to examine this refuse. They have use for everything, and but little Is left after they have passed, their thoroughness being one reason why the system is still allowed. Every scrap of paper has its market; rags are gathered for paper manufacturers; shoes go back to leather dealers. Old sardine and preserved meat tins are used for making playthings, old bones produce gelatin and glue, lemon and orange peels are greatly sought after and sold at the rate of a cent a pound to perfume and fclrup manufacturers, old metals are highly prized, cigar stubs go to tobacco factories. and even stale vegetables are carted away. The quarters of the ragpickers of Paris are just outside the confines of the city sections carefully avoided by most people who do not belong to the guild. Every member of the family, from the oldest to the three-year-old, takes part In the sorting of the spoils and It often happens that members of a family die either from poisoning from stale food or from a cut from one of the tins. Popular Mechanics. A LITTLE TILING riianKem the Home Feeilnff. Coffee blots out the sunshine from many a home by making the mother, or some other member of the housebold, dyspeptic, nervous and irritable. Thery are thousands of cases where the proof is absolutely undeniable. Here is one. A Wis. mother writes: "I was taught to drink coffee at an early age, and also at an early age became a victim to headaches, and as I grew to womanhood these headaches became a part of me, as I was scarcei ly ever free from them. "Abcut live years ago a friend urged me to try Pottum. I made the trial and the result was sd satisfactory that we have used it ever since. "My husband and little daughter were subject to bilious "attacks, but they have both been entirely free from them since we began using Postum instead of coffee. I no longer have, headaches and my health is perfect." If some of these nervous, tired, irritable women would only leave off coffee absolutely and try Postum they would find a wonderful change iu their life. It would then be filled with sunshino and happiness rather than weariness and discontent. And think what an effect It would have on the family, for the mowl of the mother is largely responsible for the temper of the children. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the cbavc letter? A new one appears frem tir.ic t time. They are frenulum, tru. a::d full ol human interest.

. a : V - n SI - II ' t "I" The Kiiirriinenlnl IIut. Every farmer should have, and easily can have, a small experimental plot of ground for testing the soil and different crops. Xo farmer can ever know the highest capacity of his soil till he has fertilized a small portion of his land very heavily with a complete balanced mixture of fertilizers, planted the very best of seed, and given the crop, or crops, extra good cultivation. Many fanners hear, or read of 100 bushels of corn to the acre, or several hundred dollars an acre made in growing special crops, and do not believe that it is possible. They do not believe it because they have never done half so well on their own land, but they never put half the amount of fertilizers, nor half as good seed, nor half as good cultivation, to the crops they grew. Try an acre, or even a half acre, of ground on your own farm this coming season and see what results can be had from it. Begin now to fertilize and do not stop till the piece of land is as fertile as it can well be mado with at least three different kinds of fertilizing matter. Prepare the land in the very best manner, use the best seed, and give a dozen cultivations. You will surprise yourself with results. Journal'' of Agriculture. Uran Mnh. Can you make a bran mash? Like coffee, mashed potatoes and a few of (he everyday things, the average furnished is not of good quality. To make a bran mash, take a clean bucket, well scalded out. and put in tho measure of bran. Then pour into the center, stirring all the time, scalding water enough to make It moist. Cover it closely whiie hot with a blanket, and let it stand three or four hours, until cold. There are many times when a cow or horse is sick

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THREE-HORSE HITCH.

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This arrangement enables one horse to walk in the furrow when ploughing and two on ihe unploughed land. The length is marked cn each of the parts. The draught chain must be set weil toward the left of the head of the plough.

and weak, and needs a bran mash. The usual proceeding is to use any old bucket and some hot water. A handful of bran is stirred into a slop, and, scalding hct, Is put under the sick animals nose, only to be rejected. It should be cool, or cold, and only moist enough to hold together when pressed in the hand. Then add a little salt, and it is relished by the sufferer. California Cultivator. How to Fasten JIallet Handles. The old method of fastening mallets o handles by boring a hole through he head and inserting a wedge from ie outside, may be superseded by a jew way that makes the tool much leater and one that conceals the Kedge and eliminates all possibility of :he head flying off as the wedge canjot come out. This new way is to pore a hole the size of the handle and Jhree-fourths the distance through the toad, then cut a slot in thehandle md insert a wedge as shown in figure I. Put the wedge end into the hole bored in the head and drive it in. When the wedge touches the bottom Bf the hole (Fig. 2) it will be driven Into the split of the handle, thus forcing the sides out and making a tight fit. Popular Mechanics. Straw In. Mannre. Owing to its abundance, straw is added to barnyard manure, but it can be made more serviceable if made fine with the feed cutter before being used. While straw may soon rot after being mixed with manure, yet In a fine condition it is a much better absorbent and can be forked T'ito the manure with advantage. Wlin loading and spreading manure there is a saving of labor when handling that which is fine, and the manure will be more valuable because the loss of ammonia will bo arrested by the use of suitable absorbent materials. PrenerTlnK Flour. A new method of preserving flour has recently been adopted with success in England. It is done by means of compression. With hydraulic apparatus the flour is squeezed Into the forms of bricks, and the pressure destroys all forms of larval life, thus preserving the flour from the ravages of insects, while it is equally secure from mold. Three hundred' pounds of compressed Hour occupy the same space as 100 pounds in the ordinary state. Timothy mill Illne ;rnwa. While the meadow fescue or English blue grass i3 largely a Kansas product, where the seed often goes twenty bushel3 to the acre, a great !:kal of timothy is grown in Idaho and pome of the middle western states, like Illinois, Missouri, Indiana and Iowa, the southeast corner of the latter state being especially productive. ilt is harvested about the middle of ' July and thrashed with a common seji arator. Formers nml ntn. T'uo number of automobiles owned by farmers is growing rapidly. Out of 10,000 autos in Iowa. f.,o0 are owned by farmers. Kansas farmers spent $'!.-n,e00 for automobiles during 1000, and $2,7.W'r" in os- In one Nebraska town of S00 population, forty autos were sold last year to farmers near the town. Careful estimate of the number of automobiles O'vnctl by farmers in the entire United States is 70,000. The Wheat Situation. The high prices which our farmers have run up for wheat have stimulated the cultivation of the grain wherever it is possible to raise i'

Last year Chile produced 10.000..000 bushels, and was cncouragi-d by t lie results to sow ninny more acres this year. Experimental station:: cf tho Chilean government are distributing tii. best vanities or semis amen;: the farmers. It' American fanners keep down their miuc-tion to hold up price- they may find they had such a good thing that they tempted all the world into it and broke up the snap. New York Press.

To Ireent Feed Hol tin R. So many horses, especially nervy drivers, get in the habit of gulping their feed down in great mouthfuls. Here is a device that 1 have found very convenient and effective in preventing feed bolting. The feed is put into a hopper (b) outside the manger, and

a ' . y

is .ill owed to run into the manger box (a) in a thin strea.ni. The size of this stream is regulated by the slide (c), and It is impossible for the horse to get more feed in his mouth at one time than he can easily masticate. Farm and Home. Vnklng Cond natter. The best butter is made from cream collected about, the same time. Mixing cream from three or four days' skimmings is what makes the texture of butter uneven and the flavor poor. Keep the different skimmings separate, and churn them separately, as far as possible. This requires some more work, but it makes better butter. If several skimmings are mixed, stir the mixture well when cream is added. All cream should be frequently stirred when ripening in order to make the ripening progress evenly through the mass. Always skim milk before it becomes coagulated. The Alaska Wheat Fake. The "Alaska wheat" fake, which has been pretty thoroughly exposed in tho west, in now attracting attention in the east. Commenting on the result of some experiments made by a New Jersey farmer with thi3 cereal "gold brick," the Boston Transcript remarks: "ir the wheat of Alaska can H - g.g 1 1 reclothe our old but still responsive acres with harvests of the golden grain, it will be an obligation of no mean magnitude to be added to what we already owe her for past and i otential yields of gold and copper. lumber and coal." Unfortunately for the responsive acres which are awaiting the coming of Alaska wheat, that famous cereal has been repeatedly exIKsed as a fraud. Its latest previous appearance in the limelight was in Idaho, and the Saturday Evening Post, by giving it a page of praise, brought It to the attention of scientists and agricultural experts, with the result that the government issued a fraud order which prohibited. the Idaho promoters circulating any literature regarding It. Hatching Chirks. If the hens are allowed to hatch chicks very early and before told weather goes, they will have difficulty in raising the broods. Some attention must be given, especially warm nest boxes provided, and the hens and their broods must be under shelter. During very severe weather a hen can not keep the chicks sufficiently wann unless she is in a warm location and well protected. The Ilarler Crop. Six states appear to have a monopoly of the barley crop. In the year 1908, Minnesota raised 32,500,000 bushels; California, 23,427,000 bushels; VMsconsin. 24,700.000 bushels; South Likota, 21,592,000 bushels; Xorth Dakota, 18,330,000 bushels, and Iowa, 13,500,000 bushels. All the balance of the United States. 41,157,000 bushels. Total, 166,756,000 bushels. Deep Plowing. Results of experiments at the Kansas station show that deep plowing (8 to 10 inches) tends to increase tho number of soil bacteria in both sandy and silt soils. Deep plowing tends to Increase bacterial activity. More ammonia is produced. Deep plowing tends to decrease denitrincation of the reduction of nitrate and the liberation of free nitrogen. Object of Soil rultnre. Cultivation of the soil is not merely done to kill weeds, but It is a moisture conservator; makes the soil more porous, so that the plant roots more easily penetrate in search of plant food. In time of protracted drought the cultivator should be kept going whether there are weeds or not. Innil an an Imaronrr. Good land and there are millions of acres of it still available in this country at a moderate figure Is the best form of Insurance not only for the family in event of your death, but for yourself during life, while you can "joy it to the full. Xo better legacy n be left to your children. lliversifled Karmin? prcariiitK. Diversified farming is fast redeeming agriculture. Even the Western people are finding out that crop rotation is more remunerative than the one-crop metbod of farming. Diversified farming and stock raising will redeem the West as it has the prosperous part of the East. Iiicrenxe In I'nrm IlfrK. Government reports show that farm horses have increased in number fr;:u !::.0f)O,0(0 to 20 ooo.Otu) vjne i:i,m. an'1, i i value from $111 to $'.'5. til ea Illinois has more farm horses than any other State in the Union. An I'.KIX- l.n 1 ii ur Iloeoril. Eleven white Wyandotte pullets and one hon owned by C. F. Geibach, Duncannon, Pa., laid G15 eggs between October 1 and January 31. Tho best month was in December, when they laid 100 cg-3. Where lNinllry I'nys. The poultry raisers of I'etaluma, Cal., received over $2,000,000 for the producta of their hens last year. Tho ash receipts averaged more than ",000 per day for the entire year.

V

Fried (rnliHiu Muflliis. For the fried graham muffins, which are especially welcome on a cold day, measure out one and a half pints of graham meal, half a pint of white flour, half a cupful of sugar, a teaspoonful of salt, a teaspoonful of soda and two teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar or two rounded teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Add slowly a pint of milk and two well beaten eggs, beating all thoroughly together till a smooth mass is formed. Fry in boiling hot fat, like doughnuts. Parisian 1'otatnes. Peel the potatoes and, with a vegetable cutter, cut Into small balls. Roil in salted water for ten minutes, drain out and pat dry between the folds of a clean dish towel. Melt in a saucepan several great spoonfuls of butter, put the potato ball3 in this, shake until coated with the butter and set at the side of the range, where they will keep ho't for fifteen minutes, shaking often. Sprinkle with salt and white pepper and stir In a heaping tablcspoonful of minced parsley. Caramel Custard. One pint milk, one-fourth cup sugar, three Vggs, one-fourth teaspoonful salt. Boil half the milk. Beat the eggs and add to them the one-half pint cold milk, the salt and the sugar melted in a frying pan until it smokes. Pour this mixture slowly into the boiling milk and boil until it begins to thicken. Remove jand set away to cool. Serve ice colth Cheese Cake. Into two cups of cottage cheese work three tablespoonfuls of cream, four eggs, beaten light with two-thirds of a cup of sugar, a heaping teaspoonful of melted butter and the juice of two small lemons with the grated rind of one. Beat until there are no lumps and pour into a- deep open pie crust. Bake until set in a steady oven. Mollirr-ln-Lau'i Paneakes. Dissolve a compressed ycastcake in a quart of lukewarm sweet milk, adl a teaspoonful of salt and enough buckwheat flour to make a batter. Beat two eggs very light, whip them into the mixture and set it to rise for at least two hours, or until light. Do not beat after it is light, but drop by the spoonful on a hot griddle. Doughnuts. Two cups white sugar, three eggs, ,ie and a half cups buttermilk, two teaspoons baking soda, one teaspoon rait, six tablespoons melted lard. Stir e.ll well and add flour enough to stir iIth spoon and roll about quarter cf en inch thick. Fry in plenty of hot :ird. Will make about six dozen doughnuts. Itaked Haddock or Codfish. After the fish is sealed and cleaned, vut in force-meat and sev; up. Baste with butter, eggs and crumbs. Bake tbout one hour if large, half an hour it quite small. Serve with melted butter or brown gravy. Garnish with ?mon slices. Itrnn Ilread. Two cups of flour, one cup of bran, three tablespoonfuls of molasses, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one egg well beaten, salt to taste, milk to make a soft better. Mix well and bake in a loaf tin from thirty to thirty-five minutes. Station Wroth. Use a quart of water in every pound of bones and meat. Let scup boil slowly always. When all 13 thoroughly done, strain through a sieve or serge bag. Repeat before serving with cubes of toasted bread or some well cooked rice. Daked Troot. After carefuly cleaning, put pepper and salt Inside. Enough cream should be put in the pan to cover the trout. Uake from a dozen to twenty minutes. Celerr Fritters. Mix a good fritter batter, add one cup of finely chopped celery, drop in spoonfuls Into hot cooking oil, cook until brown, then remove and drain. Hints Abont the Home. Paint wooden pails and tubs with glycerin to prevent shrinking. Place all cakes to cool on a wire sieve and never put them away in tlm till perfectly cold. The old or frayed rag is a delusion, not a duster. Its particles of lin; and ravelings will make double work. It is a gocd plan to have individual markings for bath towels. The initials may be embroidered in chain stitch. When eggs are scarce and they are needed for puddings, a desser spoonful of cornstarch may be substituted foi one egg. For caper sauce always chop the capers finely, add a little chopped parsley and stir into mcitcd butter sauce Just before serving. Bread dressing may be served with a pot roast as well as one put in the oven. The bread should be baked separately in a cake tin. When frying, the stove is often splashed all over with grease. To prevent this sprinkle a little salt in th fiylng pan before putting in the fat. When short of large corks to fll catchup bottles cut cardboard to fit inside the bottle, pour hot sealing waj over quickly. This excludes all ah and catchup keeps perfectly. When using state bread for pudding? always soak it in a cold liquid. Bread that has been soaked in cold milk oX water is light and crumbly, wherea; that soaked in hot liquids is heavy. Shelves for precious china may havl pads of felt to prevent chipping the dishes. "When fragile plates must b3 piled one on another a small, plain doily placed between will save break. ai;e. If when ironing anything white vor ;id a soiled spot, dampen a piece o' white doth and put a little cream of tartar on, then rub tho soiled spot; you will be surprised to see It disappear. Cooking with curry powder makes a delicious change in the preparation oi meats, riee, eprs and fish. Curry powder is an invention of the Anglo-Indian and most housewives know littlt about it. An easy way to skin a beet without bleeding It and causing it to lose color la to put It in cold water as soon as jt is cooked. Then draw the hand gmtly down each one and the sklr will drop off without trouble.

I WANT YOU 10 TAKTA i

V HAT NOTHING LOOKS GOOD TO ONESU STIPAT10! FVCW-FVVw PILLS I NO. 10 PILLS 6V J r&AKE LIFE WO JInnyon'i Paw Paw Pill coax tho liver into activity by gentle methods. They do not scour, Kripe or weaken. They are a tonic to tlA stomach, liver and nerves; Invigorate Instead of weaken. They enrich th blood and enable the Ftomaeh to get all the nourishment from food that Is put into it. These pills contain no calomel: they are soothing, healing and stimulating. For sale by all druggists in 10c and 25c sizes. If you need medical advice, write Munyon's Doctors. They w!l! advise to the best of their ability absolutely free of Charge. MUXVOX'S, 53d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pn. Munyon's Cold Remedy cures a cold in one day. Priee 25e. Munyon's Rheumatism Remedy relieves In a few hours and cures in a few days. Price 25c. Antiquity of the Water romp. The water pump of to-day is but an Improvement on a Grecian invention which first came into use during the reign of Ptolemies Philadelphos and Knergetes, 2S3 to 221 B. C. The name, which is very similar in all language?; U derived from the Greek word pem po, to send or throw. The most an rient description we have of a water pump is by Hero of Alexandria. There U no authentic account of the general Use of the pump In Germany previoua lo lb?" beginning of the sixteenth century. At about that time the endless chain and bucket works for raising water from mines began to be replaced by pumps. In the seventeenth century rotating pumps, like the Pappenharo engine, with two pistons, and the Prince Rupert, with one, were first used. Pumps with plunger pistons were Invented by Morland, an Englishman, In 1G74, and the double acting pump by De la Hire, the French academician. Health is Wealth. Healthy people are hearty and happy; they do their work cheerily and tirelessly. Of first importance in maintaining good health 1s the having of absolutely clean cooking vessels and table ware. Easy Task oap is a sterilizer as well as a cleanser. It drives away disease germs as well as dirt. Show your family doctor tho information cm the wrapper and ho will recommend its ues. Itetrlbntlon. "Stand up, prisoner," orders the stern judge. The trembling culprit, who has been found guilty by a jury of his delighted peers, stands. "Prisoner at the bar," solemnly declares the judge, "you have been convicted of building house after house containing one of these confounded little boxes called 'reception rooms,' in which there is neither room to receive aor hooks to make It a wardrobe. The sentence bf the court is that for the aext ten years you shall be confined in me of these alleged reception rooms of your own construction and design." Immediately the lawyers for the defendant begin work upon an appeal on .he ground that a cruel and unusual punishment has been decreed. Life. Inrila-eatloa and Stomach Itemedy-. The well-known specialist on indigestion and stomach troubles, Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 202 Caldwell Building, Montlcello, 111., will send, free of charge, a sample treatment of his celebrated Pepsin Syrup remedy for the relief and cure of these painful troubles by addressing him as above. Didn't Mean That. "These," said the lecturer, Indicating them with his pointer, "are the movable bath-houses. Thousands of people congregate here during the summer season. Over here on the left is t)ö hotel at which I stopped, and an exceeding homelike place it is. I bhall give you a nearer view of. it presently. Although I was there a week or two, and would gladly have remained longer if I could have spared the time, I did rot take any baths, for the reason " (Loud and prolonged laughter.) "I meant, ladies and gentlemen," he resumed, after the merriment had subsided, "that I didn't take any baths down at the beach. This audience Is altogether too smart." Chicago Tribune. This Will Interest Mothers. Mother Grny's Sweet Powders for Children, cure Feverishnes-s, Headache, Bad S'tomaeh, Teething Disorders, Regulate the Howe Is and Iestroy Worms. They break up colds in 24 hours. Pleasant tc take, and harmless as milk. They never fail. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample mailed FItEl-J. Address. Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y. Itather Venomous. A tenderfoot who visited the Yosem.te in the old days tnus related his experience: The stage driver found out '.hat he was seriously afraid of snakes and Immediately ( proceeded to make lis hair stand on end. "Venomous reptiles? You bet. I ion't know what reptiles is, but them makes you can just bet your life is venomous. Why, one day I was comin' lown here drlvin a wagon when I atches sight of a snake In the brush ill ready for a spring. My horses itarts, an' I whips 'em up fast to clear the snake, don't you see, afore he rould 'spring. He makes one clear spring, the snake does, an' he misses .he horses." "That was lucky. But you you " "Lucky? You bet your life it was .ucky. He missed the horses, tho make did, but he stuck his fangs clean :h rough the wagon." "You don't say!" "I do say, and maybe you don't bo lieve it, but it's a fact. He stuck his fangs clean through that wagon, an' :hat wagon Is swelled up so bad that we had to leave it by the wayside and lake the horses home." CASTOR I Ä Pot Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of

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A well known Englishwoman lecture er tells some stories at her own ex pense. "I was," she says, "on a tour through, the provinces, and one night as I ap peared on the platform in a s-mall town, the chairman introduced me to my au dience in the following way: 'You havo heard of Mr. Gladstone, the Grand Old Man. Let me now introduce to you the grand old woman.' This was Intended as a sincere compliment. "On another occasion a bluff old, farmer who boasted of his ability to look on all sides of a question announced me as follows: 'This lady's come here to talk about her rights. She's hired the hall herself, and 'so she's got a right to be here, and if any cf you don't like what she's got to say you've got an equal right to walk out in the middle on't. " $100 Reward, $100. Thf readers of this paper will be pleaded to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh helng a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon tba blood and niucoiis surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and glrinz the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature la doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars fof any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address : F. J. CHENEY 4 CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Drngslsts. 7.V.' Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. ' The Story of a Statne. There was set up in the seventeenth century at Yarmouth, Isle of Wiht, what Is probably the most curious piece of art extant, erected to the memory of Sir Robert Holmes, a British naval officer of that period. The odd circumstance is that tHe statue was not originally designed for Holmes at all, but l'tr a very different personage, no other. Indeed, than Louis XIV of Franc -. This statue, finished as to the figure, lut In the rough as to the head, was being taken to France on an Italian vessel when It was captured by a British man-of-war commanded by Holmes. Upon .perceiving the unfinished condition of the statue Holmes, with grim huaior, compelled the artist, who had accompanied his work, to chisel his (Holmes') head on the king's body. And so it stands to-day. Holmes was eventually made governor of the Isle of Wight, which fact accounts for the location of this mongrel bit of artistry. Good Luck of an Old G. A. R. Veteran. O. V. Rumble, 1144 Eddy- St.. San Francisco, an old G. A. R. veteran, is now enjoying life at his California home, having 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. A Clerer StroLe. Turning defeat into victory Is the achievement of genius. This example, gleaned from the London Daily Maik illustrates the adroitness with which It Is sometimes done. ' An eminent lawyer was once .crossexamining a very clever woman, mother of the plaintiff in a breach-of-prom-dse action, and was completely worsted in the encounter of wits. At the close, however, he turned to the jury and exclaimed: "You saw, gentlemen, that even I was but a child in her hands! What must my client have been?" Consul General James W. Ragsdale ptates that another example of the policy In Canada to produce the finished fish product is the recent venture of a cold storage company at Halifax In putting up fillets of fish. This Is a uroduct virtually unknown to tnts country, but very popular in England. Ituss bleaching blue should Im In every home. Ask your grocer for it and take no substitute. Joe a package. Ladylike. A little girl on a train was chewing gum. Not only that, but she insisted on pulling it out in long strings and letting it fall back - Into her mouth again. "Mabel," said her mother, in a horrified whisper, "don . do that. Chew your gum like a little lady "Everybody's.

weakest organ. If there is weakness of stomach, liver or lungs, there is m. weak link in the chain of life which may 6nap at any time. Often this so-called ''weakness" is caused by lack of nutrition, the result of weakness or disease of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. Diseases and weaknesses of the stomach and its allied organs ere cured by the use of Dr Tierce's Golden Medical Discovery. When the weak or diseased stomach it cured, diseases of other organs which seem remote from the stomach but which.

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