Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 35, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 June 1910 — Page 7

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ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. I -McgeiaDU? ttepansimlcris-sinulatin5LVFbcdaniIRegda-SS Promotes Dt$wtionfr erfur ncss and rsLContains neBta Opiuml3rphLie norJiiacraL Not Narcotic. -aBBaawaWaawa, aSBSaaaaaaWawaaawaw fijapia Sttdm litLzrtoncteZ-it h.rmSrrdVtBicjttal'üirT. ST of W2c Aperfect Remedy Tot Consfif ar;nn . Wares jCoir-ulsions.FeMrish ncssfindLossorMXEi-. RcSnaHc Signature cf T.W iuaranteed uncart fcxact vopy ox wrapper. 114 W ÜIJ' 1 r 1

Why Have an Overheated Mifchen in Summer? When the sultry days come and the coal range makes the kitchen almost unbearable and cooking a dreaded task, put out the range fire and try the newest method of cooking in hot weather use a

SB Gook-siovQ What a contrast! The kitchen no longer is stifling hot, the work is now done with comfort, and the housewife is not worn out with the heat.

M fractionary "cte-Be sure you get this stove see Ii that the rame-cUte l

reads New Pc lection."

Standard Oil Company (Incorporated)

FASHION HINTS One of the prettiest models for a dainty little afternoon gown of batiste, is shown above. The wee yoke is of fine ecru lace, tin batiste beiig of that color, and there'l just a touch of liht blue in the sav broidery. A Natural Question. Henry James, the noted novelist, does not agree with Col. Roosevelt on the question of large families. Small families, such as prevail in France, Indicate, to Mr. James' mind, intelligence and progress, while large families Indicate the reverse. "Large families are so embarrassing, too," said Mr. James on his last American visit. I once knew a man named Thompson who had fourteen children. Thompson agreed one spring holiday to take his children to the seashore for the week end. "They set off, reached the station, got their tickets and were about to board the train, when Thompson was roughly collared ty a policeman. - 'Here, wot 'a' you' bin a-doin' of T the policeman growled, fiercely. "Me? Nothing. Why? stammered poor Thompson. "The policeman waved his truncheon toward the Thompson family. "Then wot the bloody blazes,' he hissed, 'is this here crowd a-follerin' r fur?"

For InfantanCHldrgn.

The Kind You Haye Always Bought Bears the Signature Uli Thirty Years THI CINTJ!t COWPXIt, NCW YO CITY.

f Use

IP1S

outturn

She saves her strength, keeps her health and is better able to enjoy the summer. The New Perfection does everything that any other stove can do all the family cooking, baking, washing and ironing. No smoke, no dust, no odor. Heat is applied directly and not wasted. A turn, and the Same is cut. The New Perfection stove has a Cabinet Top with shelf for keeping plates and food hot, drop shelves fox the coffeepot or saucepans, and nickeled towel racks. It has long turquoise-blue enamel chimneys. The nickel finish, with the bright blue of the chimneys, makes the ctove very attractive and invites cleanliness. Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners ; the 2 and 3-burher stovc3 can be had with or without Cabinet. Tiry dealer everywhere; If not atycrrra.irrlfafai; Dccriiiiv Circular to Uio nearest a ,'. ucy ol ia DE. M ARTEL'S FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Vrar the Standard. Prescribed and recommended fct Women's Ailments. A scientifically , prepared remedy of proven worth. I The result from their use is quick and permanent. For sale at all Dru Stores. A Kare i: x tie rl eure. "Xo doubt you recall the most enjoyable railroad trip you ever made?" "Oh, yes. It was a short trip cf only half a day, but because his private car had been derailed the president of the road was traveling with the common herd in an 'ordinary Pullman car." "And so you enjoyed the novelty of traveling in close proximity, to the president of the road?" "No; it wasn't that particularly. I enjoyed serins: the porter look humble." Birmlnghnm A -Herald. CUT THiS OUT And mail to the A. II. Lewis Medicine Co.. St. Louis. Mo., and they will s ml you free a K, day treatment of NATL'IHIS I'.E.MI'DY (Nit tablets.) Guaranteed for Kheumattsm, Constipation. 'i:k IU-adache, Liver, Kidney aid Filuod Iip-asfs. Sold ly all Drutr cists., r.t tttr than I'ills for Liver Ills. It free to you. Vrit today. Aot In Hin Judgment. "The next thinj? in order," said th i master of ceremonies, referring to tho slip of paper In his hand, "is music." "No, sir!" savagely whispered thtj leader of the band. "Not music! Tha next thing is 'Hail Columbia!' " Taking his station, he scowled, wave 4 his baton, and the noise of the brasses burst forth. Chicago Tribune. Housekeepers, attention! Try a pi rl.it of liii-s blfiiihin? blue and you will ue no other. 10c at grocer. A Carious Custom. In observance of a custom, which is said to have originated over JC0 years ago, 21 ag'-d widows of the parish of St. Bartholomew the Great, London, attended the church the ether forenoon to receive sixpence each, which they had to pick off a gravestone. The custom is the survival of a bequcr-t !eft by a lady for the provision of doles for widows over GO years of as. on condition that prayers were offered for her soul every Good Friday. The tombstone from which the money is picked is supposed to be that oT the benefactress, but it is so crumbled with age that it Is impossible to say whose it Is. This uncertainty, hewever, docs not Interfere with the usfulness of the coins to any considerable extent.

II

Hollow Concrete Fence I'oxts. To construct hollow re-enforced concrete fence posts a few modifications of the ordinary mold are necessary, In addition to the core to be placed In the center of the post, writes C. A. Cook. The mold for an ordinary 4x4 inch post 7 feet long consists of a buttorn, two sides and two end gates, all of which are held together by three iron clamps placed over the top of the sides after they are put together. The sides are held to the bottom by email dowel pins inserted in holes in the bottom, so that the sides may be readily revolted, leaving the finished pest lying on the base to harden. One end gate must have a two-inch hole in It through which the core may be withdrawn. The wooden core is constructed of 5 pieces and is 2 inches in diameter. Its full length should be feet. A round piece of soft wood may be sawed into five strips, so that when the central portion is withdrawn the narrow sides and then the wider sides may be removed from the concrete post. The galvanized iron core tapers from 2 inches' in diameter at the larger end to vi of an inch at the top. for a 7-foot post is 7 feet 2 inches long. This can bo made by any tinsmith from good heavy galvanized iron, and should bo closed at the smaller end: The mold i fastened together, and about one Inch of concrete is placed on the bottom before the core is put in position. After being wrapped with paper the core should be passed through the hole in the lower end gate. The paper covering will permit the removal of the core In twenty to thirty minutes after the post is made. The galvanized iron core may be greased, but the paper is fully as effective. The wooden core extends entirely through the post, and two end gates with two-inch holes in them are used with it. The metal core should be placed in the mold po that the smaller end is about tfco inches from the top of the post. After the core is in position the remainder of the concrete can be put in and the post set aside to harden until the core and molds can be removed. Farm Work IIorea. If those who have horses in their charge on the farm would inaugurate a more systematic course of feeding, utilizing the cheaper forms of feed, much expense of winter feeding could be saved, and' better and healthier horses would be the result. Adopt, for Instance, the plan of feeding tk horses in the morning only a stomachful of the feed, a stomachful at noon, and pnly a stomachful at night.. Such a course would give the horse's stomach a chance to digest the feed. If a variety of feed is ct hand, then feed one kind in the morning, another at noon and another at night. Regularity in feeding is important. If horses are watered frequently enough they will not . drink too much at time. Regular exercise in the open air is absolutely necessary to maintain a healthy condition. Spasmodic exorcising alternating with periods of inactivity Is dangerous and unprofitable. The proper use of the means at command on the farm will insure a good condition of the horses that will look well, be well and give excellent service. N. A. Clapp. Fnrly Ilntchlnj?. To get early sitting hens the hens must have laid out their clutches of eggs Turins the winter or very early spring. Hens that have laid during the fall and all winter will be the first ones to become broody. Those that start to laying in the spring wfll be that much later in wishing to sit. Put the early sitter to work as soon as your eggs are fertile. Remember that it is the early bird that catches the worm, and it Is the early chick that brings the big price. If possible it is best to move each hen as she becomes broody to a room apart from the other hns. Here she may eit in undisturbed peace. The room should be rather warm, as well as quiet and half dark. Under such conditions the hens will all attend strictly to business, there will be fewer broken eggs and hens leaving their nests, and the hatches In general will average a much higher percentage of the number of eggs set. Agricultural Epitomlst OrlKln of the Potato. The cultivated potato is a native of the Chilean and Peruvian Andes, but extends in original type as far north as Colorado, where a wild form is occasional. Wild varieties of the potato exist in many parts of the world, but nowhere was it cultivated before the discovery of the western continent save In North and South America. It wa3 taken to Europe, probably from Peru to Spain, early in the sixteenth century. It seems Sir Francis Drake Introduced it into England In 1586. though Sir Walter Raleigh is said to have done this a year before. It was first regarded as a curiosity, and so remained until the latter part of the eighteenth century, though the Royal Society of London in 1663 recommended It as a possible safeguard against famine among the Irish peasantry. A Xew Insecticide. Prof. C. P. Gillette, of the Colorado Agricultural College, his discovered a new Insecticide for the codlin moth, which has proved effective in destroying the worms, and probably will be found not so injurious to apple trees as other arsenical poisons. Sulphide of arsenic s the name of the new poison. It comes cheaper than the arsenics now in use. PlanllnK Potatoes. A potato specialst give3 thi3 adrice: Prefer clover sod manured. Plow about for inches deep, planting la every third furrow. Plant about last week in May. Don't plant when dew Is on the clover, as It 13 apt to rot the potatoes. Run over the potato

grotind with a disk Just When the potatoes are coming up, then harrow. Leave two eyes when cutting seed potatoes. Don't cut too long before planting. Us6 one pound paris green to 100 pounds plaster and as a rule do not go over the potatoes more than once.

A Three-Pen Poultry Houne. The cut shows a very useful poultry house for three pens of fowls, with yards arranged for the same number. The house is COxSO feet and will accommodate 100 fowls. The hallway takes but little room out of the interior and yet it communicates with all three pens. The inside divisions are of wire netting, allowing the sunshine that enters at the side of the house to fall into the pens; but the house should be so located that three sides may receive morning, noon and afternoon sun. The plan is followed, according to Orange Judd Farmer, for dividing the yard outside as for dividing the space inside the house. This gives a large amount of yard space, with yards conveniently located. This building is shingled all over the outside, with, the heaviest building paper under the shingles, and may either be sheathed or lathed and plastered inside. Carlns for Cirape. Rules for grapes culture from the experiment station record. United States Department of Agriculture: The main points in grape culture are summarized as follows: With a few exceptions grapes of the Lubrusca species, of which the Concord may be taken as the type, are the most satisfactory tor general planting. A warm, rich, well drained soil is best for the grape. Almost all vines should be planten at least eight feet, apart. Strong one-year-old vines are most desirable for planting. Thorough shallow cultivation is essential. The pruning of the first two years must be done with reference to the, system under which the vine is to be trained after it begins fruiting. During this time the vine should become thoroughly established. The best time for the principal pruning is soon after the leaves droin in autumn, but pruning can be done1 at any time during the winter when, the vines are not frozen. Summer pruning consists of pinching lateral branches in order to encourage the development of the fruit and the bearing wood for the succeeding year. . The long arm, short spur system of, training is usually the most satisfactory for the Inexperienced grower, but the renewal systems aro highly recommended. tiraftins "Wax. In an iron pot melt over the fire 100 parts of the finest asphalt, add 600 parts brown pitch, until, with stirring, it is fluid: then pour In 600 parts of melted yellow beeswax. The fire must not be too hot at this time. When it is all well mixed, add C00 parts of thick turpentine, stir it well and pour into it 600 parts of refined tallow. Lift it from the fire, stir until you begin to note that It Is cooling, and then drop in. stirring steadily, very carefully, because the mass will at once rise up, 2Ö0 to 500 parts of alcohol, according to the consistency-you wish it to have. ' The Moruan Home. Forty years ago the Morgans were the favorite road horses. This strain traces to a single ancestor, Justin Morgan, foaled in Vermont in 1793, his blood being largely thoroughbred. From him descended the Black Hawk. Bashaw, Golddust, Ethan Allen, Den Franklin, General Knox and Daniel Lambert families. The Morgan type is short of leg, thick and round barrel, intelligent and of great courage and endurance. Itemovlnff a Small Stump. By fastening the chain to one of thq large roots and bringing it across th-) top of the stump, a leverage can be secured to take full advantage of the strength of the horses. Soil Mointnre. To produce any crop it requires from COO to 500 pounds of water to make a pound of dry matter. It is important that soils have a great deal of moisture, and that It is not lost by evaporation. Deep plowing makes soils hold more moisture and frequent cultivations prevent its loss by evaporation. Green Food for Chicks. If you have your own gians feed as great a variety as you have. Cracked wheat, cracked Kaffir corn and cracked corn are all good, but something in place of meat -should be given, either beef scraps or blood meal, also charcoal and grit. The Floor of the Ilrooder. Some poultrymen use bran on th floors of the brooders, and it Is a good thing, provided It Is replenished every day. It is more apt to get foul than dry alfalfa leaves. There is Just about as much nourishment in the one as the other. The Honey Product. The country's honey product Jor last year 13 estimated at $23,000,000 There are 7,000 beekeepers in the country and the product of their hives was sufficient to fill a train of cars long enough to reach from New York to Buffalo. Small Flock llet. Because table scraps form a large part of the small flock's ration, and they are usually evenly balanced rations, is one of the reasons a small fiock of hens does better than a large one. The SeHli. Hen. A setting hen knows a thing or two, so do not disturb her when hatching any more than necessary. Do not move hen and chicks from the nest until the chicks have gained some strength.

fy A I Yard ! I PEN

How to Cook Anparngus. . Asparagus should be boiled gently in well salted water, standing if possibla to save the heads. The shoots tied together in one bunch should be put into the pot so that the water will reach about half-way up. When they have boiled some ten or fifteen minutes they should be laid on their side so that Served with white sauce or with noth:he water covers all and finished. 3ng but butter if the full asparagus (taste is to be brought out, this makes one of the real delicacies of the table. Ithultarb tiiiifjcr. Wash but do not peel the rhubarb. The pink skin gives it a pretty color. Measure the rhubarb and allow as much sugar as you have fruit. To four pounds sugar and rhubarb allow the juice of two lemons and the yellow rinds, cut thin, with an eighth of a pound cf green ginger root cut in thin slices. Cook until thick as marmalade. Mexlcnu Scrambled FkJ?When you are tired of plain scrambled eggs try them as they are cooked in Mexko. Roast a dozen fresh green peppers a few minutes, peel, remove the seeds and chop, when they should be boiled in a very little water until tender, and season well with butter. Beat six or eight eggs, add with salt to the peppers and fry all for a moment in hot butter. Itnlkin Fu due. Two cups sugar, one cup milk, butter size of an egg, one-half cup chocolate. Cook, stirring constantly, until bubbles break slowly. Have ready onehalf pound walnuts chopped fine, and one pound chopped seeded raisins. Add these, stirring until stiff, and pour into buttered pans. Mark in squares when sufficiently cool. Toik1i Steak. To make steaks very tender lay them, before cooking, on a flat dish containing three tablespoonfuls of salad oil and one of vinegar, well mixed together. Each side of the steak should be soaked for thirty minutesmaking an hour in all just before cooking. Quick llronn II read. Two cups Graham flour, one cup sour milk, one-half cup molasses, two tablespconfuls sugar, pinch of salt, one tea spoonful soda in two tablespoonfuls warm water, three-fourths cup raisin3 chopped and floured. Bake forty minutes In a moderate oven. Excellent. lllntn About the Iloune. Gritty soaps must never be used for washing paints. In wiping the kitchen range use a small bag or a glove. Paper bags which accumulate so fas may be put to good use in the kitchen Rub mirrors with methylated spirits, and polish with a touch of blue powder. One tablespoon of ammonia to a quart of water will clean gold or silver jewelry. Rolls may be rewarmed and made crisp and good if placed in a paper bag in a hot oven. The flat taste of boiled water may be removed by pouring from one pitcher to another in the open air. Meats and fish which spatter In cooking may be seared first and then placed in the oven to finish cooking. Ordinary wall papers may be cleaned with dough, or rubbed with a sort, clean' flannel dipped in fine oatmesl. When boiled custard is slightly overcooked it may be brought back to the right consistency If It be thoroughly beaten with an egg beater. A baking powder box with a small bole in the bottom makes a sharp, quick chopper for use when warming over potatoes or vegetables. When beating upholstered furniture in the house, place a damp cloth over the pieces. The dust adheres to the cloth and does not rise to the room. The soiled lace yoke of a dress need not generally be removed to be cleaned. A plan which usually restores its pristine freshness Is to rub powdered starch into the lace, let it lie some hours and then brush - it out. The starch absorbs both crease and dust. Most every housekeeper knows w hat a job it is to clean a grater after grating cocoanut, lemons, or, in fact, everything she grates. If she will have handy a small scrubbing brush or hand scrub, as they are caMed, and scrub with this every particle will come out immediately and leave the grater sweet and clean. AET OF EATING AN APPLE. It Is at lim IIet If Munched When Sitting: on a Fence. The r.pple is so engagingly vagabondish a fruit. It 13 the black sheep of the fruit family, the tramp and roadster, just aa the. berries are the gamins and beggars. To eat an apple at a table is to treat it with all disregard of its charm and character, the New York Sun says; to approach it with knife and plate is to take the hopelessly wrong road to Its good graces. It should be munched out of doors, preferably with others in one's pockets. An apple is at its best it eaten while sitting on a fence. It then admits you to its sweetest juices, and so attuned is it to the posture, so grateful for your understanding of It3 proper environment and for the spirit of your attack, that any apple, even a lamentably gnarled one, contrives at such a time to be not wholly unworthy of your attention. An apple always incites to theft, seducing the most carping moralist, and yet making theft seem right, seem the only sane act, In the very moment of your downfall. Apples love wanderers, pprove of homeless people and followers of the highway. They encourage them by growing near the road and doing their best to sustain and nourish. Even in a city apples hold their own and exert their influence. They make opera goers stop at fruit stands and in the Hare of a gas jet drop carefully chosen apples into a vulgar and undisguised paper bag. With Its pleasant bulge again one's side one's habits change, sinking to a distinctly informal plane. Apples are above all an informal fruit and they argue that opera clothes have no weight against the enticing of rowdyish diveKrion of a ride on the top of a motor bus, air and apples being sufficient plcasm to justify the fall of any man. TIey argue so well, backed by their wholesome, lawless tastes, that one must Tweeds agree, and providing the apple set3 the tone they make any lark a success.

LIGHT SHED ON GRIME

Mysteries of Murders Are Often Revealed by Men's Desire to Talk. ESCAPES ARE NOT rHZQJJENT. Detection Even Where Dark Deed Is Cunningly Planned by the Shrewd Perpetrator. One of the strangest features In all the long history of crime, commented upon by nearly all famous investigators, is the fact that something the guilty person said or did was responsible for the verdict of guilty, says the- Kansas City Star. Murders lost carefully thought out, plots conceived In the mind of only one person, so shrewdly and cunningly devised that detection appeared impossible, have been explained and their perpetrators punished through the operation of an irresistible impulse of conscience which leads men in trouble to talk. Few murdeers have gone to their graves without telling some one, somewhere, the secret burden that bore down upon them always. Harry I lay ward, a well-bred young fellow of Minneapolis, was convicted and put to death In 180." for murders of which none would have suspected him bad it not been for his unsought confidence to his brother Adry before the crimes were committed. Prado, the Paris murderer, put to death in 1SSS, was convicted by admissions made in moments of confidence. John Higgins of Adrian. Mich., wrote a romance describing the murder of Iafayette Iadd, and was convicted of the crime. Carlyle Harris, in New York, directed attention to himself by involuntarily exclaiming: "What will become of me?" when told of the death of his unacknowledged wife, whom, as the trial and his subsequent admission proved, he had poisoned. Harris was a medical student. As in the cases of doctors who commit murder, he might have been expected to so do the work that the cause of death would be hard to trace, if not Impossible. But luck was against him, as well as his conscience. He gave his wife a box of pills, all of which, except one, were harmless sedatives. By chance alone the fatal pill was not taken until after all the others had been used and she took it the night Harris called to see her. One of the courtliest and most scholarly scientists in Buenos Ayres in 1S9 1 was Prof. Beaurigard. He entertained extensively and hi3 invitations were eagerly sought. His chef and butler were from Paris. Attention was drawn to the fact one day that many of his distinguished guests died soon after attending his dinners. After fifteen had died autopsies were ordered, and the discovery made that In every case death had been caused by yel.ow fever, typhoid or cholera. Some one remembered then that Beaurigard had boasted that he could kill a whole city full without being detected. Beaurigard was arrested. When his butl?r appeared against him he swallowed a drop of hydrocyanic acid which he had carried in a capsule in the hollow of one of hi3 teeth and died. Suicide, in this case, was the only escape, and the suicide was confession. After his death ' It became known that Beaurigard bad amused himself by giving his guests disease cultures, or germs frozen in water, which did not, of course, affect their vitality. When one gets down to the actual figures the world's murder record is appalling. Statistics are lacking for the period since 190G, but in the five years preceding that time 45,000 persons were murdered in the United States. With the difference In population considered. It is hardly fair to compare England and Wales with this country, but it Is nevertheless noteworthy that in those two countries only 317 murders were recorded In 190.", against 8,760 in the United States. Thinkers attribute this wholesale slaughter in America to laxity of the law and the innumerable loopholes through which accused persona find a way to liberty. The fear of punishment has never served to keep men or women from murder. Each man believes himself smart enough to leave no clew. Fmiila tliiK Their Hunhandn. Not to bo outdone by their husbands, each of whom has a chance to spread himself In an autobiography upon the pages of tho Congressional Directory, the wives of senators and representatives who compose the Congressional Club the busy getting up biographies of themselves, which will shortly be seen in print, says the Washington correspondent of the New York World. Hero Is one of the questions which have opened up lots of discussion: "Were the voters in your own family of the same political faith as your husband?" Answers show that many a politician's borne is a house divided against itself. It also shows that many of these feminine insurrectors still believe that the ticket father voted was the right one. The most interesting answers are made to this question: "What could you do to make a living if you were thrown on your own resources?" These answers developed that there are even successful inventors among congressmen's wives. Successful teachers and talented musicians and artists abound. Many have hobbies which would, they believe, In time of stress net them a good income. Club members are taking much Interest in the gerealogical records. Several have fcund relationships hitherto unknown. It Is expected that the biographies will be printed under the auspices of the Congressional Club next winter and that copies will be furnished to each member as the Congressional Directory Is distributed. Queer Lcjcnl Oath. In Siberia, in the wild Ostayaka law courts, tho natives swear by the newly severed head of a bear, which is Implored to subsequently rend and devour them should they perjure themselves, while In Assam the op posing witnesses lay hold of a chicken by its feet and retain each onehalf as the clerk of the court chops It In two. By undergoing this ceremony they are considered to be pledged to a like fate In the event of their swearing falsely. Chicago Journal. A man's appetite usually lasts longer than his stomach.

N A original and genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir cf w ' Senna, known throughout the 1 world as the best cf family laxatives, for men, women and children, always Ljy has the full name of the California Fig 1

:nown e best

;r men, women and children, always s the full name of the California Fig SvruD Co. nrinterl nn th frnnt of

Wm r7 DyruP pnntea cn tne irent el WS

J V J I j every package. leading druggists ;ize only, regular per bettle. The

times offered are cf inferior quality and do not give satisfaction:

isv there

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declined.

The Ku itliuia n In a Groove. In England nine-tenths of the lads cf the middle classes look forward to nothing more than a Beat at an office desk with a certain nu.mber of shillings a week for a certain numbf of years. To attempt to do anything else would be to run the risk of social ostracism. A young man may loaf respectably on his family, but he must on no account start a business if it involves selling anything or producing anything with his hands. That would be bad form. It would be getting outside the groove.- Thus Tor the great mass of the people England holds no romance. The lad who thinks he could do something is discouraged. Everything is so cut and dried. Every class distinction is so definitely marked. The whole weight of public opinion is against the smallest divergence from the ordinary rule. Manchester (England) Mail. Your Great Grandmother Made Soap. She would fill a barrel with wood ashes, let rain water seep through them to make lye, and then have a soap boiling day, using all the bacon rinds and scraps of fat meat and grease she had saved. She made soft soap. Nowadays women doi.'t have to ruin their tempers and their health and their looks making soap, or toiling all day over the washing. Easy Task soap a pure, white laundry soap made of clean tallow, cocoanut oil. 'borax and naptha does the hard half of the work in the laundry and everywhere che in the house that a safe and sure cleaner is needed. Never Affects Him. "That strancre frenzy, that peculiar eagerness, with which so many people rush to pay their taxes during the latter part of April," remarked Dinuss. "has always been an unaccountable mystery to me. By gum, I never pay anything till I have to." "I've noticed that in ,your case for more than twenty years " sighed Shadtolt. When Itubbera Become Xecenxary And your shoes pinch, shake Into your f-hoes Allen's Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powder for tho feet. Cures tired, achhipr for-t and takes the Ftinj? out of Corns arvl Hunions. Always use it for Breaking New Khoes and for dancing parties, s . everywhere 25c. S.imple mailed Fill '.':. AdJre:;:,. Allen S. Olmsted, Le Key, N. Y. Fletchcrlilnsr Under DlfllcultleM. Tohby." said his mother, "sit up straight and don't tuck your napkin under your chin. I've told you hundreds of times " "There!" exploded Tommy; "you've raade me lose the count! I don't know now whether it's 25G or 3-6 times I've chewed this clam!" Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. Constipation Is the cause of many diseases. Cure the causa and you cure the disease. Easy to talra. Not Particularly Impressed. Mr. Upsome You had a good time seeing the Riviera while you were abroad, I presume. Mr. Struckett-Rltch Er yes, but one performance was enough for me. I've seen it played lots better right here in Cincinnati. Chicago Tribune. Instant Relief for AH Exe, that are irritated from dust, heat, sun or wind. PETTIT'S EYE SALVE. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. The wly AVcd. Sometimes we interpret too literally. 'I want to learn to make jelly said the newly Installed housewife. "Is it hard?" "Oh, Lord, no, mum!" replied the cook, with supreme pity. "It's soft." Judge. SUCCESS FOR SEVENTY YEARS Thlslsth? rcorlof l'aVikü'eri Vtrry Itaru). An liahlo reim-dy tor diarrhea, dysentery and all bowel complaints. Getthegerjuiue. 2öc, euc and tCc There, a Reaon. Fhysician I have told you to take Ion walks in the open air, and you are not doinr it. Confirmed Dyspepttc I know It, doctor, but you told ir.e I was to take thcri on an empty stomach, and I never ha an empty stomach. Chicago Tribune. Red, Weak, warjt Watery Eye Relieved By Murine Kve Remotiv. Trv Murine For Your Kve Troubles. You Will Like Murine. It Soothes. 50c at Your Drutfcists. Write For Eye Hooks. Free. Murine Kye Remedy Co.. Chicago.

What Ails You Do you feci weak, tired, despondent, have frequent head aches, coated tongue, bitter or bad taste in morning, "heart-burn," belching of gas, acid risings in throat after eating, stomach gnaw or burn, foul breath, dizzy spells, poor or variable eppetite, nausea at ti ncs and kindred symptoms ? If you have any considerable number of tho above symptoms you are suffering from bilious ncss, torpid liver with indigestion or dyspepsia. ' Dr. Tierce's Golden Medical Discovery is made up of the most valuable medicinal principles known to medical science for the permanent cure of such abnormal conditions. It is most efficient liver invigorator. stomach tonic, bowel regulator ond nerve strenthcncr.

The "Golden Medical Discovery is not a patent medicine or secret nostrum a full list of its ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. A glance at these will show that it contains no alcohol, or härm ful habit-forming drugs. It is a fluid extract uaJe with pure, triple-refined glycerine, of proper strength, from the roots of native American medical, forest plants. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Props., Buffalo, N. V

throughout the

cf family laxatives, - - - - - .... - It is for sale by all everywhere, one price 50 cents imitations some should . be PORTABLE 3ATKS PCPTJLAIL Baltimore Institution ratroniz4 Heavily on Warm Da vs. The city of Baltimore ha3 a fint system of portable shower baths In which the residents of the congested sections may enjoy bofh hot and coll water baths during the summer months. Although called portable, the baths are not moved from place to plac every few hours, but are baths housed under canvas or constructed of galvanized Iron sheeting. They are erected, says Popular Mechanics, on vacant lots in congested districts and remiilfc at one place all summer, the "portable" meaning that they can then b taken down and packed away until required the next year. The patronage of such a bath on irarm days, it is stated, numbers about 400. On two days a week women attendants are placed In charge, and the baths are turned over to womet and glrl3. From 330 to 400 availed themselves of this opportunity. Almost Regretted It. Gen. Jackson had won the battle of New Orleans. "Just as likely as not," he reflected. "It will turn out that I've committed & monumental blunder. I ought to hava let Pakenham have his way, and taki the whole Mississippi River. It woull have been cheaper. Now, this country will have to Improve the blamed oil stream itself!" Years afterward, however, he chanted his mind and decided that It waj best for the victors to do the spoiling. A Skin of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. D R. T. Felix Gouraud's Orlentat Cream or Magical Geautlfler. Remorei Tan. T!ror-!, VIZ ann erery Giemaa on beauty, and J tic driect ion. M Lai stood ILt tttt of J year. tsJ U o baruit-M w tastlt tobfvrtt i property ma-la. Accept bo count' felt of ivjxLm came. Dr. L. A. fvf aaid t lady of the hank ton (a patient)! A 1 yua ladM wiA M them, i reeumntBt 'Gnnmad'a Creura' u th Wt hamful of a.l im kin preparation." I or alt by all AraggA and Kaac UooJa rjvalers la the Tiüttd &lalea, Cauaua ad Earop FEE1T. K2FIIHS, Prsjs 27 Era! Jx-.es S-et, I.i fek DAISY FLY KILLER traru aa4 killa all l.nu Nxv, rtMa,rBMuenWtl. ooavaaW tit. rh!. Lamts kS raaaa. Xkiaef amm 1. CaDD(4 apill ar tip erer, U1 not jC or Injur anything. Guaranteed affart Of all aralvra ar aaat prefai't lur 2'i renia. ! lKlk tow, Braaalra, Sew lacft Stockers S Feeders Choice quality; red and roans. Whitefaoor Angus, bonyht on ordt-ra. Tens of thousand to sJ oct from. Sat is, act ion guaranteed Correspondence invited. Come and see for yoorseC NATIONAL LIVE STOCK COM. CO. At either KANSAS CITY. MO. ST. JOSEPH, MO. SO. OMAHA. NEB. FOR DESSERT TO-DAY. Dcllclously Flavored JELLYCON The Perfect Jelly Dessert. FRFFf BEAUTIFUL ALUMINUM VC.- JfcLXY MOLDS. Tb. offer I fully expUlaed oa lOe. Tackage. tii. circular la wy pacLife. Sola" By 4U Crteert. LSDY TO REPRESENT US IN EVI RT TOWN. Best aelttnt: honaabold necevtt I.arc tlamand for foods. buiaaa tuarutml. W ri aa at cue. ilUK.NNAN X ., Jew Urica., LaV WAMTCn-ET0,y1,o,,y sufr. rlnit from I'ile If All I UU or aar form of Ketul Ailuienta, to write me for Five Trial of my l'ifelün Falnless File Cure. S. U. TAKNKY. Auburn. Ind. MST PÄnS Of Ocean, Seashore, Board Walk iu i itKt.Jtf and Bathine scecea at Atlantic City. Printed in natural colora. All new. Tea lor 10 cents, stamr or stiver. The Calvert C, 123 So. Virginia Ave.. Atlantic City, rl. J. Wanfprl REAL estate ETERTrnrnK. II UUIkU We can f at yoo abat yon want tneirtianra ror yonr property, no rratt-r whera located, rw rxt tut lit- iHiS- t. 1 I viTli.n a. ii , !.t. ..iiTT iura, 6 Per Cnt CA2EY ACT IRRIGATION BCK3S. l'-st secured on thv mnrkrt. At ic 11. i. NOEL, 3ii North Fourth, St. Louis, Ma PATENTS Wati. E. Coleman, anilucton.D.C Books frae. HV eat rafarenoea. muH F. W. N. U. - No. 23 191 When writing to Advertlaera pleas any yoo unr (be Adv. la ttila paper.

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