Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 40, Number 57, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 March 1908 — Page 3

No Time Wasted

Prompt Action is Pleasing Many Re asaelaer People. det down to the cause of everything. Bad backs are caused by sick kidneys. v Core the kidneys you Cure backache. Doan’s Kidney Pills are for kidneys only. No time wasted trying to cure other troubles. Rensselaer people endorse their merit Charles Hemphill, living cfn Van Rensselaer street, Rensselaer, Ind., says: “My wife has had occasion to use Doan’s Kidney Pills and they have proved of great benefit to her. She suffered from backache, had severe headaches, tW was unable to rest well at night Her kidneys were disordered, and all these ailments served to injure her health. I saw Doan’s Kidney Pills advertised, and procured a box for her at B. F. Fendlg’s drug store. They seemed to be just what she required, as they gave her relief from the headaches and backache, and acted as a general tonic for the kidneys. Mrs. Hemphill is feeling much better since using Doan's Kidney Pills.” For' sale by all dealers. Price 50 mints. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New Yrok, sole agents for the United Staten , Remember the name—Doan’s —and take no other.

MY WIFE SUFFERED SEVEN YEARS 1 v WITH SCIATIC RHEUMATISM CORED BY SWANSON'S . "5-DROPS” writes P. S. Baxter. Kynesville. Fla. ' Mr. Baxter writes: "My wife suffered with Bristle Rheumatism for seven years. She was tm a very bad condition. After using “5-Drops” far three months it made a permanent cure, tth was several years ago and she Is still well. gg stops J II PAINS caused by Rheomatism: Lumbago. ■ I HI Sciatica. Neu- ■ T&Os&rk. HI ralgia. Kidney M H I Trouble and kinI nil dred diseases. I JSH 111 i *i 5 " oi, i ) i ps ”id i ‘th n I r v.-r 1 1 YTJ 81l blood or the polI sonous matter and I u i. i»’ ffly I instant relief from ■ AbulultlyPure IN Pain while per. ■ •" o»(c>oms I ■ manent results are ■ tMMTojowa D « being effected by I -P" 11 *°*T_ H I|| purifying the I «a. V 11| blood, dissolving I Vf-fraPfWEto It ill the poisonous sub- ■ ™/ r ' Coat co. ■ II I H stance and removlag It from the i TRIAL BOTTLE FREE If you ire suffering with Rheumatism. LutnSaga.'Sciatica. Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or saw kindred disease, write to us for a trial bottla iPhOROW" and test It yourself. "hBBOPI* is entirely free from opium. eo> natwe. morphine, aleohol. laudanum and other sfmUtar Ingredient*, i bWgo Mm IttUa ••S-DBOPW” (SO# Dhml St.S*. Tut Bala by Dntilato. SWAN SO N RHEUMATIC CURE COMPANY •sps.se we utoJUMtcuMsi SAVE YOUR HORSEsI Morris' English F Stable Liniment *» ik« Md prnelratinf ImieiM mad- Il .Joe. ««* •• «*»• tuuuki f oca l* Ike ewal es tks Double al **><*■ It • Ha/a lever, relieves rerrasw, • iwsHinf. # . . Sal a, S|ks4|i iml Paatlsve far AlS(raim>4 Tendons, Bau.aia.Cuia, Suenwjf, bull Jaeta. Capped Hatk Shoe KoiU. Cara*. Rl.m iwati.m fistula. strtn«h*k I •"»*.«, ..I all k.aa. Wtotury Ik.'A .1 .1 l.*>l* l w give / aalialnctHM* In Use for 20 Years. *•» testimonials .nd Irrr t».„,h BPtM "o‘hr H*r»r. Hu Oureiri and ■ Te*mimtm " Unamout lor -I. by DjnlyTiyi Dwliitata er sent pre*mdt.w SO «oa4s. I I npnQ|Maanju| TK.nl Slid LAFAYETTE, IND ■awyyi—Xaww-CM —i M Got Your ABSTRACTS t Prepared and examined by the Fgmars loan &' Abstract to. — *ns - *t - ~p- f ~-*** ~ R. f. Fafftitea Pres. W. R. Its tee/- Test.

IMMIGRANTS' OLD BEDDING.

Said to Be Solid M New York Dealers For Use in Their TVade. New York dealers say that the luxurious divans of the rich are not Infrequently constructed from materials which at one time formed part of the humble couches of immigrants from the region of the Baltic Sea. A considerable part of the mattress stuffing used by manufacturers in New York consists of sea grass harvested on the shores of»Barnegat Bay. Following big storms this variety of eel grass is found uprooted and driven close Inshore in large masses. Men come from as far as Philadelphia to gather it. The gratis is spread on the beach, where it is cured very much as hay is, and after being' baled is shipped to New York dealeA, who sell it to furniture makers. The grass brings an average of $22 a <4n and finds a market as far west as DenVer. About' 175 tons is received by the local market in a year and most of the stuff goes to make up the’middle layer of filling in mattresses for beds and divans.

For a long time the American grass had no competitor except from Canadg. But of. late another source of supply has been found, j A sea grass similar to that found on the coast of New Jersey is produced on thef bores of the Baltic Sea and Is brought to this country In the bedding of the Immigrants. After serving the uses of the steamship Companies in the bunks of the steerage the sea grass is sold to small dealers, and resold by them to the large dealers In New York for sls a ton. * Many dealers at first refused to carry this eda grass, remembering Its strange history and fearing infection, but competition overcame their scruples and they felt themselves obliged to handle the stuff. An average of 150 tons a year Is now used by the New York .trade and Is made up into mattresses and upholstered chairs. One New York firm which handles the Baltic grass received word recently from a Philadelphia firm that the grass shipped to it contained a very lively colony of fleas. The dealer wrote back that fleas were foreign ttvthe nature of the grass and received the reply that there could be no doubt of that, since the fleas had shown a marked desire to exchange their abiding place for the person of the buyer. This Incident caused an investigation, which brought to light the origin and history of the Baltic grass The dealers say that the Baltic grass sold to them is not disinfected, being put In hales as it Is taken from the immigrants' bunks and supplied :to the trade, with any additions which It may have received on the passage over.—New York Sun.

The Rev. Placide Louis Chapelle,

Roman Catholic Archbishop of Naw Orleans, who refused to his poet of duty when the yeWow fever epidemic broke out and died from the treacherous disease after a short illness.

State Without Divorces.

There are domestic tragedies in South Carolina; there is incompatibility; there is unhappiness in some families. But I believe the number of such beclouded homes Is fewer In proportion to population than In any other State. There may be no means of clearly establishing that contention; it ia one of the things on which neither the census nor the encyclopedias throw Hght, but the personal knowledge of many men of wide acquaintance should be accepted as tbe beat evidence of Its truth. The divorce courts In other State* reveal a degree of domestic infelicity there existing; and the increase in the number of divorces recorded is testimony either ot an Increase In Immorality by which the old scriptural warrant for divorce la given or an Increase of Intolerance between husband and wife. Aa the courts hare removed tbe obstacles to separation the petitioners have come with more trivial reason# for severance of the “holy" bonds, i|r What is the case in South Carolina? Tbe eeurts of other States are. of course, open to dtlsens of this commonwealth who desire dlvoroe. Both North Carolina and Georgia are readily accessible and the conditions are not hat'd. Yet I kaow not one divorced mao ->r woman In the “society'* of Columbia, Charleston or any other town In the State. And if there are. in theae quite extensive circles, caaes of grave domtEUc unhappiness. the skeletons are securely ocked alt hip the closets. They are nUuoen to the pubUe.—PahMe Iplnioa _ _

FOUR INDIAN TRIBES.

The Cherokee* Are the Most Advanced irl Civilization. * *- The Cherokees, who tracked Do Soto’s footsteps for many weary days while he was marching through, the Southern forests and swamps and who later welcomed Oglethorpe to Georgia, are the most advanced Indians in civilization and the most eager for education, spending $200,00(1 a year qn their schools and colleges. The Cbickasaws have five colleges, with - 400 students, maintained at a yearly cost of $47,000. They also have thirteen district schools, costing $16,000. The Choctaws have 150 schools. In some of which the higher branches j are taught. , The Seminoles, one of the smaller ! tribes, have ten colleges and sixtyfive common schools, with a total attendance of 2,500.

Nests of the Golden Eagle.

Every pair of eagles whose Kkblts I have had an opportunity of watch, ing over a period of a few years would seem to have invariably at least two alternative sites for their nests; some have three, and I know of one with four sites. In fact, I only know of one pair out of many whicn habitually resort to but one place and ftnly nitt r ■-*- ' ; —J, The reason for this is. however, apparent,. for owing to its situation has never been disturbed. The pest is in a small cavern on the face of an absolute wall of limestone rock some 800 feet high, at about 400 feet from tbe summit. the cliff is a talus of loose stone at an angle of 45 degrees or so, above which again rls’e other precipices. To reach the nearest point above this nest would be a long day's work.

The Double Canals on Mars.

For the first time the much.discussed double canals on the planet Mars have been caught on a photogfapnic plate. Professor David Todd of Amherst College did it, 15,000 feet above sea level in the Chilean Andes, with his fine celestial camera, made by Gaertner of Chicago, especially for the college telescope, which has an object glass 18 inches in diameter, and is the largest ever used in the Southern hemisphere.

Joke on Governor Hoch.

There seems to be a joke on Governor Hoch of Kansas. He appointed J. E. Wade of Cloud County a member of (he Farmers Congress, “reposing special confidence In his ability and integrity,’’ etc.; but it turned out he was In the penitentiary digging coal. Wade was the defaulting treasurer of CToud County, but was a prominent and respected stockman when Hock knew ki»

Has the Freedom of Morocco.

At least one European has the freedom of Morocco without danger of molestation or capture. Mine Du Gast, a pretty society woman of Par. Is, who had visited the country be. fore, w&s commissioned sometime ago by the French Government to investigate and report on me agricultural resources of Morocco. She has made many journeys Into the inter, lor, being furnished wltu escorts sometimes by Raisuli. tue famous bandit; sometimes by the pretender Muley Mohammed, and occasionally by the Sultan himself.

Rattles of the Rattlesnake.

The rattles of the rattlesnake, lie edgewise. It is evident that they must do so. Inasmuch as they are but continuations of the backbone. The snake carries the rattl»s on the ground except when he raises them t Q sound his warning. This “will be evidenced by the fact tnat iii every snake of aqy size that is killed the rattles ace worn through ou Lie un. der side. . \ Mr, Jacob A. Rlis tells of a little boy who earned his living by blaek. Ing boots. Every Sunday he attend, “d a mission school. iTbls school, through'its well.meauing teachers, lecided to have a Christmas tree. The gifts for the pupils were provided for them by the teachers and some pat. rons of the school. Jimmy, the bootblack was there Christmas Eve, but was much disappointed when his present proved to be a copy of Rrowuing'g |>oems He folded it carefully in the paper ip which he received it, and took it home. The next Sunday the superintendent of the mission school anuobneed that any child who was disappointed with his or her gift could exchange it. Jimmy marched boldly to the front with his. “What have you there, Jimmy?" “Browning, sir.’* ‘ And what do you want In ex. change?" “Blacking, sir.” "

Queen of Stam's Jewels.

The Queen of S'am poetesses Tbe finest collection of jewels tn thworld. The wall*., of her bed chamber are literally ablaze a tin ore ,o < t while In a safe In her Majesty's apartments are diamond*. rubies, pearls and emeralds fashioned into quaint necklaces of fabulous value. One little article alone, intended to serve as a thimble, Is in tbe shape of a lotus flower and is valued at £ 15.000

Only those things that are put into living are learned.

MOVING PICTURES IN ITALY.

The Residents in That Land Are Surfeited With Dancing Women. Milan, the centre of Italy for the moving picture Machine trade, has already about forty such theatres. Every available hall Is being turned into a moving picture show, while nearly every second and third rate theatre and “case chantant’’ finishes the evening’s performance with a few cinematograph pictures. During the dull summer season even the larger theatres are used.

Dramatic and tragic scenes, natural scenery of an interesting fiature, and comical farces are pure to fill the hall at any time in Italy. The Italian loves to see living scenery; for instance, a moving picture view of Niagara Falls was a huge success here a short time ago. The Italian also likes to see typical scenes of national life, anch as for instance, bull fights in Spain and winter sports on the snow and ice in Switzerland. Railway scenery is very acceptable, as are views of large towns, pictures of tbe larger towns of tbe United States would be a huge success in Milan. Occasionally typical scenes from American rife have been thrown on the sheeting, stick as cowboy life and train wreckers. The Italian is disgusted, if not already surfeited, with pictures of singing and dancing woo." en, neither does be like fantastical scenery fronai fairy tale?.

Plentiful Game in Germany.

Half at minion sportsmen In Germany, kill annually 40,000 head of red and ftlTonr deer, 200,000 roebuck, 4,000,000 hares, 4,000,000 partridges 'and 400,000 wiFd duck, in ali some 26,000,000 ltfkrgraros of Wild game Ot a value off 25,000,000 marics, or ss,_ 000,000, foaming nearly 1 per cent of the total meat sapply of Germany.

Tobacco in the Philippines.

,ob*rc> iw the fourth largest export of the Philippines, while to point of total crop value it is only exceeded by hemp and rice. The main tobacco belt fs embraced In Luzon, Cebu and Paady, tbe famous Cagayan Valley, £q F.uzyn. producing the bulk of the finer grades. Considered as a manufacture the making of cigars and cigarets is the largest industry in the iatood today.

12,000 Miles For $15.

What is probably the cheapest rate for a sea voyage ever offered is that now made available by the Govern, ment of New South Wales, Australia, to young women who ar« prepared to go out to the colony to undertake domestic service. The charge to these emigrants for the journey from England to Sydney, 12,00 b miles, is sls.

U. S. Behind in Aeronautics.

That the Government and the people of the United States are lagging far behind the European countries in the matter of aierial navigation is the opinion of Major Henry B. Herseychief inspector of the Governmeift Meteorological Service. He urges that an aeronautical department be established by the Government to keep pace with the European Pow. ers. ' " - -

There Were Other Pockets.

Nathan Straus was driving his mare, idia Highwood, on the New York speedway. A company promo, ter. noted n<> less for his wealtli than his iinscrupulousness. dashed by and Mr- Straus said: "There is Blank. When he came to New York in the seventies be had only a dollar in his pocket." Mr. Straus paused and smiled. “However,” he said, "there were other pockets.”'

Burdett's “Owl Nest.”

George A. Burdett, the noted Boston composer and organist, and dean of tlti* New England chapter of the American Organists’ Guild, does ail bis work in a little room at the top of hia house, w hich he calls “owl nest,’’ in which is a piano and all sorts of things calculated to appeal to tha musically inclined.

Cremation in the Alps.

Cremation makes grsut h sdway In (he nips. Geneva takes the lead, both in point of number and equipment, tut Zurich. Aareu. Berne and l ain, anne are each building a second crematorium. Five other towns are do. Ing Mkewtie.

Defied Superstition.

Defying superstition the Herald of Slatlngton, Pa., began publication aa u weekly on Friday. September 13. The first copy was taken from the press at 13 minutes before 6 o'clock, in the pieseuce of l? witnesses.

It is not generally known tl\at s spoonful of ox.gall in one gallon of water will set the colors of almost any goods which are soaked in it before washing; also, that a teacupful of lye in a pall of water will Improve the color of any black goods. Vise, gar In the rinslug water will bright, en pink or green calico, and soda will do the same lor purple or blue calloo.

Scheme to Irrigate Sahara.

Proposed schemes to irrigate the Desert of Sahara are said to be Impracticable because of the great depth of the overlaving deposit of sand. He who is not afraid to die la Tilly immortal. Folks are nltfaya sure to tome up a your expectations.

WILDCAT MINING SCHEMES

Methods Less Dangerous and More Profitable ar Present MINES ARE WORTHLESS Cheapest Form of Stock Gambling— If Property Should Prove Valuable the Crook Relocate* i«—Promoters Strfve to Retpia a Controlling he interest in their Corporations. Immediately after the discovery of a new gold camp Tbe coining stock : swindlers get the busiest. For a few hundred dollar* tit shark can buy or locate in the vicinity of the new camp shreds sod patches of ground that have no present or prospective value as raloe*. A mining corporation, with so attractive name and a million or iwo of capitalisation, is formed. A few friends are called in and' a set of oflP-ers and directors is selected. 'l'hev at once negotiate a deal whereby sli or nearly all of the stock is utroed over to the owners of the claim lo payment for it. Then whatever stock of the company has been issued l« owned by the promoters, while ijhe company has the claims. If toe latter cost $ 1,000 and ther eiock Urtoed, 2,000,- j 000 shares, fs sold as so average of five cents the clean up is close to SIOO,OOO. ; . All of this, howeyet-. la ooi velvet. Tbpre must be e*peo*i»Hy fined up offices, a corps qf clerk* and, stenographers, adyertfsios expsoaea and various Uttle detail* lo- be rpvereti., All of which cost money. The whole object df tbe campaign' is o get rid df the stock quickly. a ‘/ear Is the usual limit. . There are many legitimate mining brokers but there at* liarpies In abundance also. Jr la difficult, save through experience or pievious.careful inquiries, to dtetf the real mining broker from rh» aham. The latter is a close imitator He, too, controls some broket*** or financial company, and be. too advertises hts sole business s« b- handling of sound stocks of p»o**d »alue. Ofttimes a group of ib**e abarks will organize a half dp*** companies. One is thus able to giiat a me# to Inquirers the solvency or rbe l»gi'iaiacy of another, and by freely com mending one another’s proposition* h»lp to swell the number of sna-ker*. Many of these tnioe* ate located In territory that baa been prospected and found to be practically worthless. Any one cam ride out, put up a notice saying ibai he £ia* discovered the "Little Monarch." that be claims 150 by 1,500 feet in* a--northerly direction, that he claim* aixty days in which to do loe a**e*«ment work and thirty days le which so file notice with the Co-tjjty <!l*rk or R*-_ corder. In a few hour* be can stake off half a dozer* claims, and within sixty days he cuo »<*• a hole put in each one for SJS. . If be is Impecuoiou* oe may go to a friend and tell him rbat if be will put up enough tuooey for the floating of the corooratioo he will make him president aoci gi'e him half of tbe promotion stock. Half of capitsUlzatfon wilt be uuen as pay for the promotion a«id the remainder is sold as the tvea*»•( *■ atock.

Another plan of displays remarkable fio»nci«l ingenuity. A, shark will go two a din'( let and get an option on » p4e«-e of worthless ground for a fe-w hood red doTlari. He organizes » compsoy. but aa a guarantee of solid(rv * a n ounces that it will be incOrDOi steij ooly when the sale of the ct■:>••** t>«* o»t*n assured. As the head of in jioooand mining company he make* * coo tract with the brokerage comn*ay la which be Is also imercsled. by the latter gets 60 or TO per «"oi. commission for selling the trea.iuy nock. After the work cense* oo tbs jopatented ground, the claim ,-<*'•»■ m o the Government sod is oi>»o tor relocation by the first comsi *n*i January 1 following. If if should happen that one of the claim* lo<-*i»d by these sharks shows todi<-«>loo of giving good returns to ore »iK*isinent work will be abandoned sad the claim quietly refocated by to* shark himself. Instances b»*e b-*a known al&> where small dlrid-od* hive been declared and paid out of me money received for the sals of »<o<-k. This often proves a good lnv»#'<uent for the promoter, sines the re* eloi of a dividend t* likely •<£ ••#'•»* a good demand. Promoters al »*»* »*u»* to retain for a time a cootolMoj interest in their corporal lou*. This Is done through the remoilou of the promotion slock, usuallyuslf of the amount Issued, if the prospeef s developed and proves a u**iny on* it la dooe upon the mousy fm.iished by the purchasers of !b« ne»*nry stock, but the promoters f < so yaual dividend upon stock th*i cos' itiviu ooly tbe preliminary expanse. If It proves n failure, the pion>o<*i. >be man oo the Inside, ha* <hs • #»•<•* to unload bin atork hefors ih« o ibllc hears of the Axsling ou l . PMiidstpbl* Record.

Map of the Country.

About 109 /sets more will be required to coeaoie a the work of meklng a topogi a pht.al map of the country, which »•< begun by the United mates o«w> ament In lilt. The work is beta* * a tied on In ooopnrntlon with tns Sts'.nn. New York, for esnmpfa. ka*l«« aopreprlnted nnnunlly something tike SIO.OOO ns Its ihnre. —Boston Olehs.

The popnlntlan es Albnhf. N. Y.. to now over SO,OOO.

First Honor Legion in Haitl.

• It.is not generally known that th* famous order of the Legion of Honor , was adopted at Haiti in Is 4». When Boulouque became emperor made* th* name of Faustin 1., he instituted an order in imitation of that' Which ha 4 : been established by Napoleon in 1802. Statues, ribbons and insignia wer* precisely identical, and since the sov- , ereign of Haiti distributed his honor* to ail and sundry with lavish hand, the French government was considerably embarrassed. The death of Sonlouqne ended the difficulty.—Gauloln I This is what Hem. Jake Moor,* State Warden of Georgia, says of Kodol For Dyspepsia; “E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, lll.—Dear Sirs —I have suffered more than twenty, years from indigestion, About etgheen months ago I had grown so much, worse that I could not digest a crush, of corn bread and could not retain anything on my stomach f lost 2& lbs.; in fact I made up my rnip/% that I could not live but a short time; when a friend of mine recommended Kodol. I consented to try It bo please him and I was better in ona day. 1 now weigh more than I ever did in cay life and am in better health than for many years. Kodol did it. I keep a bottle constantly, and write this hoping that humanity will bo benefitted. Yours very truly, Jake CX. Moore, Atlanta, Aug. 10, 1904.” Sold by B. F: Fendlg.

Striking.

“Women think up such queer similes,'’ said m friend who dropped in afcour office yesterday morning. “Now, there’s my wife. She and I were wanting down the street today and w* met one of those ladies with a ‘ready to go on at a moment’* notice’ complexion. ‘Get on to the flush,’ I says* ‘Yea,’ agreed my wife, ‘doesn’t it look tike a kettle of tomato soup? *-* Cleveland Leader.

NO USE TO DIE.

“I have found out that these la a* use to die of long trouble as long aa you can get Dr. King’s New Discovery,” says Mrs. J. P. White, of Rushboro, Pat. “I would nbt'be alive todayonly for that wondferful medicine, it. loosens up a cough quicker than anything else, and cures lung disease even after the case ispronounced hop* less.” This most reliable remedy foecoughs and coldk, lagrippe, asthma, bronchitis and hoarseness, is Bold under guarantee at A. F. Long’s drug store. 60c ants SI.OO. Trial bottle free.

Ideal War Horses.

It can be said in all confidence that the Barb and Arabian horses are th* Ideal war horses of the world, and th* product of their breeding to our western ponies would undoubtedly be of high standard and considerably improve our cavalry mount, making him second to none as adapted to the com dltions of modern warfare and tactic* —Journal of the Military Service Institution.

BEST HEALER IN THE WORLD.

Rev. F. Starbird, of Bast Raymond, Maine, say a: “I. have sold Ruoklenn Arnica Salve for several yea*a» on* my old army wound, and other obstJr nate sores, and' find it the best heater in the world 1 , I use It too with success to my veterinary buslneML** Price 26e at A F. Lung's drag storm

Jealousy a Counterfeit.

Jealousy is a terrible tbing. It ensembles love, only it Is precisely love’a contrary. Instead of wishing for thn welfare of the object loved. It deairea ■ the dependence of that object upon itself and its own triumph. Love to the forgetfulness ol seif; jealousy to the most passionate form of egotidtau— A niters Journal.

Be careful about that little cough.

Get something right away; some goodk reliable remedy-that will move tha I towels. Kennedy’s Laxative CougXt Syrup acts gently yet promptly one the bowels and allayn inflammation* at the same time. It in pleasant to take and it is especially for children, an it tastes imaifj a» good as maple sugar. Sold by B. ML Fendlg.

Floating Villages.

Not eve-yone knows that in tbe IS* •rior of Africa several floating vtt> ires have been constructed on the aters or a lake. They were diseow ’•’d tn IBS# by Staniev

Genius and Sleep.

Dr. Savary. addressing tbe Frond Academy of Sciences, warned bis bear, era against getting up immediately am awakening from sleeps The eminent Charles Lamb uttered the same warming many years ago. it Is thus thns men of genius anticipate the profs*, atonal experts.

THE LUCKY QUARTER

is the one you pay out for a >f L'r. King’s New Life Pills. Tbflfe hring you the health that m<** preclout. than jewela Try them headache, biliousness. constipation and malaria. If they dlappoint yon* the price win be cheerfully refund ed at iV K Long * drag mmk

Task a Difficult One.

A Boston woman lost her bag that ont alned her address cards, a Uttto •toney and a bedspread that shn hod •egun »o crochet when she was 8 cars old. and had worked upon for 1U ears, with It still unfinished It to o be hoped tbe lady got bar crocbeing. for It is no wonder that sha said the would go out of her mind if ah* lid uot get It back.

Pleasant.

(hie 'irrj thing about castles In th* dr !a .at w,* need not pag taxaa uto lien*

Here comes the spring winds in chap, tan and freckle. Use Plneealro Carbol's d (Acts like a pcmltice) for 'uts. sores, burns, chapped skin. 84d by B. F. Fendig. MAMp Home Orocefy, Phone tt,