Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 31, Plymouth, Marshall County, 5 May 1910 — Page 7
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Delicately formed and gently reared, will find, in all the seasons of their
maidens, wives or mothers, that the one simple, wholesome remedy which acts gently and
pleasantly and naturally, and which may be fs3;"i i7$er? with tmlv hpnpfiHal pffpr.t.s. under am"
- - - j ,w.w.k ; conditions, when the system needs a laxative, is Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. It is well known to be a simple combination of the laxative and carminative principles of plants with pleasant aromatic liquids, which are agreeable and refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system when its gentle cleansing is desired. Only those who buy the genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna can hope to get its beneficial effects, and as a guarantee of the excellence of the remedy, the full name of the company California Fig Syrup Go. is printed on the front of every package, and without it any preparation offered as Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, is fraudulent and should be declined. To those who know the quality of this excellent laxative, the offer of any substitute, when Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is called for, is always resented by a transfer of patronage to some first-class drug establishment, where they do not recommend, nor sell false brands.nor imitation remedies. The genu-
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price 50 cents per bottle. Get a bottle today
to have in the house when needed. FASHION HINTS y ; I I A novelty chiffon Marquisette of rose color is used here as an overdress for a ' lingerie gown. It's a fine way to rejuvenate a lat years creation ; and one overdress, being entirely complete in itself, may work its magic on several gowns. ... I CAJTADA FORGING AHEAD. Thoma3 C. Shotwell. one of the greatest market reporters in America, writes from Xew York, under date of March 20th, and says: i "The tariff tangle with Canada which President Taft has taken In hand is of importance chiefly because : of the multitude of American fanners that are crossing into the Canadian northwest. Most conservative esti- . mates of their number place It at 150,000 for 1910. Some Kay as many a3 2."0,000 will cross. These are all expert farmers and their places In the United States are being filled by untrained men from Europe and from the cities. Canada is gaining rapidly in agricultural Importance and within a few years the United States will have to call cn the Dominion for wheat. Production of wheat in the United States Is not keeping pace with tho population. A tariff war would complicate the problem of getting food. Even now Canadian farmers are getting higher prices for their cattle on the hoof, and Candian housewives are paying le&3 for meat In the butcher shops than farmers and housewives are receiving and paying In the United States. The tariff on cattle and wheat must be removed as between the two countries before long." A Girl Gold Miner. Ida. 14-year-old daughter of a Civil War Veteran, G. W. Rumble, .1144 Eddy St., San Francisco, goes into the mountains with her papa's locating device and method and locates gold mine.s; also re-locates lost pay chutes in old mines. Write her, and she will tell you about it. Why lie d. The' angel was making up the list I never asked my fellow man If It was hot enough for him, remarked Abau Ecn Adhem. And lo, his name came In under th-i wire first. New York Sun. DR. VARTEL'S FEMALE PILLS. SeTenteen Yean the Standard. Prescribed and recommended for women's ailments f- scientifically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick apd permanent. For sal at all iraz stores. tfbjeetlon Saatalned. Judge The witness told all that tappened on the second floor. Now, vhy do ya-j object to his telling what lo pr-e ned on the third floor? Counsel Because. If It please your f.onor, that is another story. Brookyn Eagle. Mrs. Winslow Soothing Syrup for Children teething: softens the gums, reduces inllammation. allays pain, cures wind colic. 2i cents a bottle. A Clean Man
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Outside cteanlbess is less than half the fattleT A man may scrub biisrlf a dozen times a day, and still be unclean. Good
hesUh means cleanliness not only outside, .1... f,oiTKw tti-i,fdif
& clean stomach, clean bow.'.?, clean blood, a clean liver, ana new, clean, healthy tissues. The man who is clean in this way r.-ni look it and act it. He will work with eneriW and think
Vitruil, kicai ut"; uuiu He will never be troubled with liver, lung, stomach or blood disorders. Dyspepsia and indigestion originate in unclean stomachs. Blood diseases are found where there is unclean blood
consumption and Droncmus mean unclean lungs. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery preyents these diseases. It makes a man's inside clean and healthy. It cleans tho digestive organs, makes pure ) clean blood and clean healthy flesh. It restores tone to tbo nervous avstem, and cures nervous exhaustion and prostration. It contains no alcohol habit-forming drugs. Constipation is the most unclean cleanliness. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pel lets cure it. They never jrie. Eesy to take as candy.
... f women lives, as a nmnr . t ..... asatTttSitTail n rfnl nnrnlnK Itrb Cnrfd In a Day. 'In the middle of the night of March COth I woke up with a burning itch iu ray two hands and I felt as if I could pull them apart. In the morning the itching had gene to my chest and during that day it spread all over .my fcco'y. I was red and raw from the top of my head to the soles of my feet and I as in continual agony from the itching. I could neither lie down nor sit up. I happened to see about Cuticura Remedies aad I thought I would give them a trial. I took a good bath with the Cuticura Soap and used the Cuticura Ointment. I put it on from my head down to my feet and then went to bed. On the first of April I felt like a new man. The Itching was almost gone. I continued with the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and during that day the itching completely left me. Frank Gridley, 323 East 43rd Street. Xew York City, Apr. 27, 1909.M Cuticura Rexcdies are sold throughout the world; Potter Drug & Cfcem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston, Mass. Lost Fee Inside Patient. Macy a surgeon has had to repeal an operation to recover bits of spongj or other medical equipment left in the victim on the operating table. Br the story Is going the rounds here? says a Paris correspondent of the St, Louis Republic, that a brilliant Frenc!) surgeon has distinguished himself b leaving his fee in the sufferer's abdomen when he stitched it up. The patient was a merchant, whq saw to all the arrangements himself, up to the commencement of the opera tion for appendicit'3. The last tiling he did before going under the anesi thetic was to pay the surgeon the fee with a check! for $1,000. The great man tossed it aside on a pile of absorbent wool that was presently 1 use. 1 Later, when the last stitches were being put in after tee operation, he looked for the fee and could not find it. He opened the patient again and found the boodle, according to the story that is diverting medical circles. Have You a Baby? Every woman knows how imperatively necessary it is that baby's things shoulü be absolutely and perfectly clean. She knows the trouble she has with common yellow soaps that leave tho dirt in and often make the little garments harsh and irritating to baby's skin. Easy Task soap you can get it of your grocer is the quickest and safest cleanser made; it is antiseptic and it reduces the work of washing by half. She Warn I'rauk. Miss Mary Morris, daughter of the late William Morris, poet and craftsman, said at a dinner in New York: I like the American taste for Its frankness. Better be frank, even if wrong. t The pretty American girl was by no means hopeless whose comment on first seeing the Incomparable glory of the Venus d Medici was, I wouldn't be seen dead with ankles like that!" RHEUMATISM IS CURABLE. NATURE'S ItEMEI Y (XK taUets) will cure Uheiimn t Ism un! Io it uikly. It thoroughly cloanse atii regulates the kidneys, liver nnd digestive system that its curs seem almost niagiml. Kesults guaranteed. Take one to-night, you'll feel better In the morning. 5et a 2c Hox. AM Druggists. The A. II. Lewis Medicine Co. St. l-ouis. Mo. Oalerlilns Society. A friend from Denmark who declares he knows tells me that the late Kins and Queen of Denmark put doVn their undoubted and even extraordinary youthfulness of appearance and character to the fact that they never had anybody about their court who was over 40 years of age. Any gentleman or lady over that age was supperannuated. The Gentlewoman. Ladies who take prirl In clear, white clothes should use ltuta Iileacliing Ulue. Sold by grocers. Genoa Mrndalae. Mrs. Wheedle John, dear, you are going to get me a lovely pearl necklace for my birthday; a bird whispered it to me. Mr. Wheedled-Don't you believe it. It must have been a lyre bird that escaped out of some menagerie. Boston Transcript. but inside. It means
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rinnttng Potatoes. The prevailing, and we might say foolish, custom of most farmers is to plant potatoes just as they come, little and big. Indeed, some use the smaller ones for seed and retain the larger ones for cooking purposes, sometimes placing them cn the market. While such a course will not noticeably affect the potato crop for a single season, its continuation surely but slowly lowers the yield not so much by an insufficient number of tubers, but by inferiority In size and quality. We believe this to be the chief blunder made by most potato raisers and that it accounts for more failures with this crop than any other one cause. Assuming that you failed to select seed potatoes at the proper time last season (as nine out of ten fail to), great care should be exercised in selecting seed this spring. With the thought in mind that it was quite like ly the healthy, vigorous plant whica produced the larger tubers, these should be chosen for seed, since the smaller potatoes, which no doubt came from a weak or inferior plant, and, if planted, would produce a like growth. Is this not true of any other plant or animal life? Then why chould it not be true of potatoes?--Twentieth Century Farmer. Fnetn Aliont Fnrm. Nearly 1,000,000 new farms have been created in the United States during the last ten years. In the last ten years the total number of farms has increased IS per cent. In the older Statesfrom Ohio eastward, there has been going on for 20 years a tendency toward the amalgamation of farms distant from market into larger holdings.
HOW TO PLANT SHRUBS, ROSES AND TREES.
Correct way of making hole. Notice how the bottom is rounded. The roots lie with a downward turn. They are not cramped or crowded or bent from their proper course. On the other hand, this section ha3 witnessed the cutting up into smaller sizes of many farms nearer to market. There are now almost three times as many farms as in 1S70, and an unprecedented increase, in the value of farm land3 and live stock. American Agriculturist. Tree Planting Device. To those who will be planting shade and fruit trees, the following method may be of assistance. In preparing for planting stake out the plot having the stakes in lino in several directions. After the plot is carefully staked the trouble Is to get the tree set on the exact place occupied by the ctake. The following plan will overcome thl3 difficulty. Take a board about 8 ft. long and 8 Inches diameter, as shown in Illustration. Core a hole device ron tklt: planting. in each end and cüt a notch in the middle. Tlace the board with tho notch against the staie and drive wooden or iron pins i ito the holes U. B. The board can then be removed from the pegs, place t'ae tree in the notch and pack the soil around the roots. The tree will thus be in tfie exact spot occupied by the "stake, an 1 in line with the others. KSK Iniport. The fact that eggs are not Included in any lists of imports which we have seen published and from the results of the American hen's activities, as reported by the census office, leads to the supposition that importing eggs would be like carrying coal to Newcastle. In 1900 over 1,293.662,433 dozen eggs were 'produced in the United States. Thl3 number is large enough to provide each person in the country with seventeen dozen egg3 a year. There are almost four times as many chickens In the United States as there are people. Hovr 3111k Is Formed. Milk is elaborated from the blood. Food Is converted into blood, which is forced from the heart and lungs to the udder; from the udder It returns to the heart through the large veins from the under side of the belly, running from the udder nearly to the front legs, where they enter the body and connect with the heart. These veins are commonly called milk veins, but they are not. however, as no milk ever passes through them. The orlflce3 in the body where such veins enter are called milk wells Rural World. The IKS-I'atlnR Hen. Some one wants to know how to keep hens from eating their eggs. Having had some experience along that line, I ofTer a few suggestions: A deep nest box, in which there, is only room for the hen's body, so that she cannot get at the eggs when on the nest, and too deep for her to reach the egg3 when standing on the edge of It, Is a gooU thing. Tho best nest box I have used is 14 inches square and IS inches deep, covered with a 6-inch door or opening at the top of one side. The A'nrlou Mtoek." A breeder cf Buff Recks wants some me to explain why it is claimed th::f liarred I'lj mouth Rocks arc so much better market fowls than all other varieties, especially the Ruffs and White Plymouth Rocks. All three have the r.aiue general conformity, all three have yellow legs and yellow skins, and the buffs and whites have no black pin feathers, as have the barred variety. Exchange. A Gooil fornse Crop. Canada peas and oats Is a favorite forage crop with many New York state farmers. The crop may be sown from early spring to the middle of May. By making soing3 at intervals of two weeks, a succession of crops may be
had. The common rate of sowing Is
one ami one-half bushels of each per acre. Tho peas are usually soatttred broadcast on disked or harrowed ground, and then turned under a'oout thre or four inches deep. The ground is then harrowed and the oats drilled a few days later. The land may first be prepared and each crop drilled separately, but this is not usually as sat isfactory as the other method. reas and oats are good for hay or to cut and feed green. When the oats. are heading and the peas blossoming on3 may begin to cut for green feed. For hay the oats should be in the milk stage, and the peas should have wellformed pods. Peas and oats can also be pastured to advantage with hogs. This crop will give a yield of five to seven tons per acre of green weight. Tempornrj- Sheep FVnce. A movable fence of this kind for soiling sheep is made in panels as seen in the picture. The panels are ten feet long, made cf four inch boards solidly nailed together. After this fence is once put up sheep or hogs are not likely to overturn it. A fence three and one-half feet high will turn most flocks. Denver Tost. Value of the Silo. The Missouri Experiment Station summarizes the value of the silo as follows: Silage keeps young stock thrifty and growing all winter. It produces fat beef more cheaply than does dry feed. It enables cows to produce milk and butter more econom ically. It is more conveniently hau- j died than dry fodder. The silo prevents waste of cornstalks in the manure when silage is fed. The silo will make palatable food of stuff that would not otherwise be eaten. It enables the farmer to preserve food. Y it. Incorrect way of making hole. Observe bow the roots are bent upward. If the shrub lives the roots must bend downward again not always successful'.' accomplished. which matures at a rainy time of the year, when dry would be next to impossible. It is the most economical method of supplying food for the stock during the hot, dry periods in summer, when the pasture is short. Drainage. One of the essentials about the poultry bouse and grounds Is good drainage. For this reason a good hill lope is the best place for the grounds. The land should slope enough so that rains will wash it clean cf all impurities. On flat land the grounds should be frequently changed and planted to some crops that v. ill take up the noxious elements. The draining and surface draining the grounds will assist in keeping them dry and pure. Scraping off the top soil each j'ear and filling with fresh soil from the field will aid in purifying the grounds. The soil from the yards may be used as a fertilizer for the field from which fresh soil is obtained. Journal of Agriculture. A Valuable Hatch. A forcible illustration of the capabilities of a setting of eggs were seen in a poultry show not so long ago. A man bought a setting of eggs of one of the. American class of fowls. Twelve out of 13 eggs hr.lt lied, one of the chicks died, but th" ewner succeeded in raising the remaining 11 to maturity. He brought them to the show, there were three cockerels and eight pullets and they were all of a uniform color and size. They won first cockerel, first and second pullet and first hen. They wero easily worth on hundred dollars of any man's money, but the owner did not wish to sell them. Waterproofing Cement. There are some cases where the waterproofing of concrete is very desirable. The granary may be of Importance where the base is in direct contact with the ground. The cellar should be dry. The universal use of concrete has made it possible to construct feeding and watering troughs for the barnyard. Cisterns may be required on the farm, not only to retain the water, but to keep it out. There are several methods used in making concrete and cement mortar more impervious to water by the addition of foreign ingredients. Fnrni Xotea. Cut alfalfa when it is dry. A good milk cow never becomes rolling fat. Milk sellers find the Holstein hard to beat. Milk the cows quietly, quickly and on time. Never buy pigeons unless the mating is guaranteed. One bad butter cow will eat up the profit ol several good ones. Too much corn causes the bones of heavy hogs to break easily. Rut the manure spreader Mrst and the piano will come easier. Clean the dairy stable in summer just as regularly as in winter. Treat the coVs kindly and they will repay you in dollars and cents. It Is imperative that sheep quarters be dry at all seasons of the year. In the big cities the market for squab is good for evtry month in the year. Red clover in blcom is r.ot go-jd for bcg3, but when yomt- it r.j.il.f;;. a 4-:st ure. Do not fill the chum owr on"-;h:r.' to one-hair full. Che the cream loviii for cgitation. The woven wire fence ma!;-s bog pasturing easy compared with the cldfashioned rail fence.' Goo butter must be .properly presentee, to the market. It must not only be good, but look good. The type of sheep ttat combines a large body win a good fleece Is the one for the small flock owner. Keep the pigeons' flying lofts clear of bolts as the birds are apt to injuri themselves by flying against them.
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CuredbyLydiaEPiakham's Vegetable Compound Galena, Kans. "A year ago last March I fell, and a few days after there was soreness in my right side. In a short time a bunch came and it bothered me so much at night I could not sleep. It kept growing larger and by fall it was as large as a hea's egg. I could not go to bed without a hot water bottle applied to that side. I had one of the best doctors in Kansas and be told my husband that I wov.ld have to be operated on as it was something like a tumor caused by a rupture. I w rote to you for advice and you told me not to "get discouraged but to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I did take it and soon the lump in my side broke and passed away." Mrs. R. It. IIuey, 713 Mineral Ayc., Galena, Kans. Lyaia E. Tinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has proved to be the most successful' remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result has been worth- millions to many suffering women. If you want rp'.oial advice writ foritto3Irs.linkhain,Lrnn,Maai It is free and always helpful. Dictionaries Up to Date. Talk about keeping up with Iht times." said the professor, "the makers of dictionaries have to be up to the very minute. I don't believe a day passes without some new word being introduced into our language. For most of them the originators of slang delightfully original fellows, aren't they? and the men of scienc are responsible. I was running over the other day a list of new words assembled for the latest dictionary, and I declare I was amazed at the number that were, in truth, new to me. Did you know, for example, that the pomato is the name given to the cröss between the tomato and the potato, that a grasshopper destroyer is called a hopperdozer. and that the scientific term for hookworm is uncinariasis? Speaking of slang. I notice that place has been found in the dictionary for rubberneck, stunt, tank up and fan of course," the professor added somewhat hurriedly, "I mean a baseball fan. And there are hundreds and hundreds more." $100 Reward, $100. The readers cf this paper will be pleaed to learn that tLere is at least one dreaded disease that science has Wen able to cure In all Us stdpes, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh l)e!nj a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the t.vstem, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by b'jllding up the constitution and assisting nature In doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative potrers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It faMs to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Ad.!-ess K. J. CIIKXHY Jfc CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Pnigslsts, 75c. Tale Hall's Family Tills for conttlnatioo. l'aele Study. Mr. Fond Father reproved his little son for having only 75 per cent In arithmetic. "Mathematics, my hoy," he said, "is a very useful study, and you must try to do better." "I thought that was only useful for Bailors," said the boy. "Why for sailors?" "Well, people on land have adding machines, don't they?" New York Tribune. Comp omul Snlpluir Tablets For the R!c-k1. Skin Eruptions, Iioils. etc. An old and tried spring Keuiedy. Hy ma'.l 25c Wkli.er l)Kfo CoM ltGHAtr. Ouio. Saved by Fireflies. The gigantic tropical fireflies which swarm in the forests- and canebrakes of most of the low lying West Indian Islands once proved the salvation of the city of San Dominga. A body of buccaneers, headed by the notorious Thomas Cavendish, had laid all their plans for a descent upon the place. Intending to massacre the inhabitants and carry away all the treastire they conveniently could, and had actually put off their boats for that purpose. As they approached the land, however, rowing with muffled oars, they were greatly surprised to see an infinite number of moving lights In the woods which fringed tho baycfu.up which they had to proceed, and, concludiD that the Spaniards knew of their approach, they put about and regained their ship without attempting to land. Looking nackward. On the night following the YalePrinceton game last fall, a young man who had slipped and fallen was assisted to his feet by a passer-by. "Just a little shelebration of viefry," the young man explained as he waved a bedraggled bit of orange and black ribbon. "But Princeton lost,", the other told him. The young man looked painfully surprised for an instant. "How do you know':" he asked. "Why, it was on the bulletin board an hour ago," the other said. "Yale won to-day's game. "I wash referrin'," said the young man with great dignity, "to th game of 1903." Llppincotfs. A .woman may point the finger ot scorn at a man. but she pofce It la the eye of another woman. The Appetite Calls for more Pst Toasties Let a saucer of this delightful food served with cream tell why. 'The Memory Lingers" Pkgs. 13c. aaJ 15c. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. Cattle Creek, Mich.
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The Kitelien ' F.n trance. The kitchen entrance of a house should be as attractive as the front entrance. A back porch with mops, brooms, buckets and scrubbing oxitfit scattered about is inexcusable. A large box, painted any desired color, could be used as a closet for them. Plant boxes placed along the porch edge and filled with flowers will add beauty. Vines over a door, where there is no porch, will prove bright and cheerful. Snlail I) reus In a;. One tablespoonful of flour, one tablespoonful of dry mustard, one tablespoonful of sugar, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-half cup of sweet milk, one-half cup of vinegar, three-quarters cup of water, a lump of butter the size of a walnut. Mix flour, mustard, sugar and salt with a little of the water until smooth, then add the other ingredients and stir over the fire until thick. 3Iock .Mince Tie. Roll out four crackers and stir into them one and one-half cups of sugar, one cup of molasses, one cup of cider, one cup of water, two-thirds of a cup of butter, melted, one cup of chopped raisins, spices to taste, and, last of all, two well-beaten eggs. Bake in a pie plate lined with good pastry and cover with an upper crust. HollnmluiKc Sauce. Cook together two tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour and pour on them a cup of heated milk. Beat to a smooth sauce. Take from the fire and beat in gradually the whipped yolk of an egg, a tablespoonful of salad oil, pepper, salt and sugar, a pinch of each, and the juice of half a lemon. Serve at once. rtrnit Rixcuitn Again Two cups of cleaned wheat bran, one cup of white flour, one teaspoon ful of baking soda, one tcaspoonful of salt. Mix thoroughly and add onehalf cup of molasses and one and onehalf cups of sweet milk. Bake In gem tics in a slow oven for thirty minutes. Chocolnte Almonds. Shell and blanch the almonds by pouring boiling water over them, then slipping off the skins. Lay on a towel until dry. Melt in a double boiler a cake of sweet chocolate and dip each almond quickly in this, rolling it over and over, and then lay on waxed paper to dry. riean Soup. Cook small soup beans (which have been soaked over night) in the water in which the ham was boiled. About twenty minutes before serving add a couple of potatoes cut fine. No seasoning will be required. Serve very hot. ' Look "Well nnd Taute Well. A rcund loaf-shaped sponge cake with the center scooped out and filled with diced pineapple and mixed witt whipped cream and seasoned with sugar makes a sightly and tasty dessert. Decorate the top with cherries. Oatmeal Soup. Slice one large onion Into one tea spoonful of melted butter. Add on cup of cooked oatmeal. Cook five minutes. Add two small cups of milk, one cup of stock and season. Strain. Boil up and serve hot. ut kind Cream Sandwlchen. Chop very fine (or grind) two dozen English walnut meats. Whip half a cup of cream very stiff, add a little salt and add the minced or ground nuts and spread between si fees of graham bread. Olive and Clieesc Sand wiche. Chop a dozen stoned olives very fine. Rub a Philadelphia cream cheese to a paste with the minced olives and spread between crustless slices ol bread cut thin. Hints About the Heute. Slice bananas over the cereal anc serve with milk or cream. A cloth wrung out of vinegar and wrapped round cheese will keep it from molding. Stuffed potatoes are made by mixing cheese and bread crumbs in with the contents. Ammonia water that has been used for washing may be used for plants. It Is an excellent fertilizer. Suede shoes that have become shiny and worn looking can be freshened by rubbing them with fine sandpaper. A coarse cloth dipped in salt and water and rubbed over straw matting will prevent it from turning yellow. Pour a little melted butter on top of cereals aud cover with stewed prunes, figs, canned peaches or raspberries. Boil pots and pans In water and washing soda. Scour enameled ware with one part of fine salt to two part of fine sand. A few allspice are an Improvement to stews, thick soups and gravy. They give almost the same flavor as if win had been added. Flaster figures in hard or alabaster finish are easily cleaned by dipping a stiff toothbrush in gasoline and scrubbing into all the crevices. A delicious way of serving oat meal is with maple sugar and cream. Shave the sugar and pour the cream around it. This may be eaten warm or cold. Garments that are to be hung out to air can be put on hangers rather than pinned to the line. This pre vents sagging or marking with the clothespins. After the weekly washing rub a little vinegar and spirits of camphor over the hands. This will keep the hands in good condition summer and winter. Insist upon all the clothing in the family was'a being plainly marked. There 1 nothing po annoying to who-eve;-pts away the clothes as to guess i.i -:;y:. tbo different pieces belong. ' ::v. -.li. o- the vc.lr.o cf in v.spape: ? 7hi-y m".:;e geed linings fcr carpal r.n.l chclvoo, and are tho best wrapping for hangings and curtains that aie l j be put away for the summer. To remove ink stains from colored va?h goods cover spots with lard, rub well, then wash in usual manner. Wiiib this method is simple, it la Mire, and will not injure the most delicate colors. When beating the whites of eggs for any purpose the busy housewife will find it a saving of time and the eggs will be stiffer and nicer in every way. if a pinch of salt is added before th beating begins.
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ALCOiTQL 3 PER CFNT Acge(ablePrcparalionrGrASsimilating CxFooMRcguiatingtk Stoiitaclis andßowtisi Promotes Diges(ionkenU ncss and Rrstontains ncittar OpiimiIorpMnc norMiacraL; kot Narcotic. xjx ofOMDiS'l'lZLllIlUlll Pimykm Srtd jUxAtantt fipptnnmfIltCarUKiokiJa ' IftmSetdJVonfod Suirr 'ui&rjrtenFhmr. &a 1 iff Or?! Anerfect Remedy forCtmsfina tion . Sour Stomach-Diarrtoa VorrnsronN'ulsioüs.FevTnshncss aid Loss orSLEEP. Facsimile Signature oT NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. Yon Can lave as cool and white as a no heat, no dust. No old
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h VlVi l I'lH BO 4 d WMs 1
Oil ßöofcätow
is the latest practical, scientific cook-stove. It will cook the most elaborate dinner without heating the kitchen. Boils, bakes, orroasts better than any range. Ready in a second. . Extinguished in a second. Fitted with Cabinet Top, with collapsible
iT Cautionary Krte: Be sure if k f you get this stove se II that the oame-plate H reads New Perfection."
Standard Oil Company Clncorported)
The Right In all Cases of DISTEMPER, PINKEYE, INFLUENZA COLDS, ETC. Of all Horses, Brood Mares, Colts, Stallions, is to "SPOHN THEM" On their tonjuf s or in the feed put Spohn's Liquid Compound. Give the remedy to all ot them. Jt acts on the blood and glands. It rouh the disease by expellics the disease perms. It warrisctt the trouble no matter how th;y are "exposed." Absolutely free from anything miuriou. A child can safely take it. 50 cer.tif.nd H.00; (5.00 and f 10.00 the dozen. Sold by drursists. harness dealers, or tent, cxjjres paid, by the manutactuters. Special Agents Wanted SPOHN MEDICAL CO. Chemists and Bacteriologists GOSHEN. IND., U.S.A. $175 PIANO PURCHASING BOND
ONLY ONE SOLUTION ALLOWED FROM THE SAME FAMILY
Send la your solution at once, alio send with joor solution the names of two or more families la your TictnitT who have no pianos. I em offerlsf this Purchasing Bond to apply only as part payment on the purchase of the Parrell Plane, in orlr to secure the names and address, of families who have no pianos, to I ean ret them interested in my method of Factory to Home Selling of the high grade i "Ureal 1 plane. I will send yon the bond, free trial order blank, catalogue and f nil particulars. Send in yonr eolation, on this or m eparate sheet of paper, at once to . S. PURCEll, fecbry-to-Heme Piano Han, The Skah'e Daesrer. One of the treasures of the shall of Persia Is a diamond set In one of his BClmiters, which renders Its possessor invincible. There is also a dagger with the same property, but It Is ordained that those who use it should perish by It. It is therefore caiefully shut up In a sandalwood box on vhlch is engraved a verse from the Koran. Chicago News. Indignation aal Stomach Remedy. 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. Too Slow for Tbla Age. "Grandma, you never took a Joy rjis, Aid you?" . "Yes, child, once; but you .wouldn't Call it joy r'ding: nowadays." "When waj it, grandma?" "Sixteen years ago. I took a ride In the Ferris wheel." "How fast did you go?" 'The wheels made one revolution In bout fifteen minutes." "Shucks!" Chicago Tribune. Trouble Coming. "Fine day, isn't it?" remarked th caller. "Yes," dubiously answered Mrs. LanBling, "but It won't be a great while now .until we have our regular equinuptlal storm." Hed, Weak, Weary, Watery Eye Relieved By Murine Eve Remedv. TrMurine For Your Eye Trouble. You ifl Kike Murtne. It Soothes. f,0c at Yuur DrufTRistf. Write For Eye Books. Free. Murin Eye liemedy Co.. Chicago.
For Infants and Children. . The Kind You Have
Always Bought Bears the Signature - of Thirty Years 15) ilUU TMt CCNYAUN COMPANY, MCW VOMR CITY. a ESoM EHekem dairy.- No smell, no smoke, - fashioned contrivances. The rests, towel rack, and every up-to-ditd feature imaginable. You want it, be cause it will cook any dinner and not beat the room. No heat, no smell no smoke.no coal to bring in, no ashes to carry out. It does away with the drudgery of cooking-, and makes it a pleasure. Women rith the light touch for pastry especially appreciate it, because they can immediately have a quick fire, simply by turninr a handle. No hulf-hour preparation. It not only is less trouble than coal, but it ccsta less. Absolutely no smell, no sxrvoke ; and it doesnt beat the kitchen. The nickel finish, with the turquoise blue of the enameled chimneys, makea the stove ornamental and attractive. liade with 1, 2 and 3 burners; the 2 and 3-burner stoves can be had with or without Cabinet. Syenr dealer eveirwhere: if not at yoor write for Descriptive Circular to the ocarea acency cf the 1 Way 6'ivea for a Solution to this Ret Depi 32, 10 Wislem in. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS J I'neoTered m Barf r 4 Tons. Every once in awhile excavation la southern Arizona tesults in the discovery of a buried village. The most recent discovery of this kind wa made by Frank C. Erwin at his home. 14 miles from Cochise. Three miles from his ranch Erwim started to dig an irrigation ditch. Only a few feet under the surface. ht began to uncover utensils of a shape) and material which indicated that they had been used by a race probably as old as the Cibolas. that strange people whose "Seven Famoui Cities" was the lure that brought Father Nlza and the negro Estevanici from the Spanish mission at Culiacaa north along the Sonora river to the) old city of. Tabac, near Tucson, which expedition was the beginning of civilization la Arizona. After digging deeper Erwin ctm across a wall, which he followed for 2& feet. Further investigation brought t light hundreds of bones well proserved, one skeleton bein.v intact When an attempt was made to take up the skeleton it fell to pieces. Amonj the tieasures unearthed was a slab oa which were written curious figure representing men and birds and animals. Erwin took several cf the relica into Tombstone and will send other to the Smithsor ian institution. The average depth of English coal mines Im 400 fei. WAMTCnCverybody suffering from PileII Mil I LU or any form of Kectal AilmenU, to Krlte nie for Free Trial of lay I'uIUt Painless Pile Cure. S. U. TARNEY, Auburn, lad F. W. N. U. No. 19 191 When wrltluc to Advertisers) pleas nay you aau tbe Adv. la thla paper.
AAP
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