The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 16, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 August 1908 — Page 7

THE COME AND SEE SIGN This sign is permanently attached to the front of the main building of the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. What Does This Sign Mean ? It means that public inspection of the Laboratory and methods of doing business is honestly desired. It means that there is nothing about the business which is not “ open and aboveboard.” It means that a permanent invitation is extended to anyone to come and verify any and all statements made in the advertisements of Lydia. E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Is it a purely vegetable compound made from roots and herbs-— without drugs ? Come and See. Do the women of America continually use as much of it as we are told ? Come and See. Was there ever such a person as Lydia E, Pinkham, and is there any Mrs. Pinkham now to, whom sick woman are asked to write ? Come and See. )Is the vast private correspondence with sick women conducted by womeiymly, and are the letters kept strictly confidential ? Come and See. - Have they really got letters from Over one million, one hundred thousand women correspondents ? Come and See. .Have they proof that Lydia E. Pipkham’s Vegetable Compound has cured thousands of these women ? CoVue and See. This; advertisement is only for doubters. The great army of women who know from their own personal experience that no medicine in the world; equals Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for female ills will sJtill g’o on using and being benefited by it; but the poor doubting 1 , suffering woman must, for her own sak£,be taught confidence,for she also might just as well regain her health

TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations

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alone cannot do. A germicidal, disinfecting s deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed ; eyes, throat and nasal and Uterine catarrh. At dr u g and toilet Stores* 50 cents, or by mail postpaid, large Trial Sample

WITH “HEALTH AND BEAUTY” BOOK BENT FREE THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. A Skin of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. DR. T. Felix Gouraud's Oriental Cream or Magical Beautifler. 25 ft J -sSSnta. Removes Tan, Pimplas, —Freckles, Moth Patches, Rash, and Skin Diseases, ‘£-e o_ V xN zXX an< ’ ever 7 blemish td ZzA) on beauty, and <leM 9 vEy- «sb. ca bes detection. It Mgn.2 fit -)r SI ba»stood the test £ tj "s’/ V"/Z of 60 years, and a.s * 2 T J Is so harmless we "JaS Xl "~X. sSI tasteit tobesureit 8 (Ft I Is properly made. -• < o JJ of Accept no counter/Os At? vrsrVr \ felt of similar ■fy'/t \ name. Dr. L. A. " I \ Sayre said to a, /1$ I I 1 lady of the haute. f /NS VW' / I ton < a patient) ta ■ / V R» 7 J “As you ladies' V J fit k. win use them,* ouf X. I recommend ‘(lnurnud's Cream' as the least harmful of all the skin preparations.” For sale by all druggists and FancyGoods Dealers in the United States, Canada and Europe. FEfID. T. HOPKINS, Prop.. 37 Great Jones Strut New York. £ Let us do your PHnting 5 ? using < i Linen > for your office stationery. > > You can get the paper ? f and envelopes to match. c > It la the real thing.- Take no other. ( JOS. OUCH AC & CO. FIMF WISCONSIN FARM 1 HNL-i and cor? AA TIMBER LANDS 92 LA SALLE STREET, CHICAGO a arUTO Mil IITEn Tosell lots tn naw county Mat Abtn I S nAN I tU town in Teiw. Low price, easy term,. liberal couimiMions, free B. It. ticket and berth. Fine busineM openings This vicinity produced fruit that took first prise at the World’s Fair; best alfalfa land on earth; vegetable, grow all Winter. Superb climate; no better place for the home maker or investor, Descriptive printed matter from Write today. K. L. Stratton, 29# Monadxook Black, CUeagc, 111 WanledAgents ■Which adjoin Improved farms. Level, fertile, no stones, sand or alkali Price .10 to »17 per acre. We operate farms and furnish tenants Write for circular _F»rmeru < olontentlon Company, 1215 First Nnt’l Rank Bldg., Chicago, II! WIDOWS’™"" NEW LAW obtained mv-T.Z-JLZLrww by JOHN W. MORRIS. PENSIONS WMhwws. »• a. .

Badding Fruit Trees. It is sometimes desirable to bud orchard! trees at a time when cleft grafting can not be done. The work can be done in late August, September and t ally (October. The purpose of budding trees is very much the same as that of gritting. The apple 1 , plum mid rosebush particularly, may be operated ripon to advantage and with good results. The work of budding can be done by a sharp, round-pointed knife and a piece of yarn. Usually the best’results follow by selecting a place where the branch is from % to 1 -i inch iii diameter, and where the bark is smooth and healthy. With the rounded part of rf-yi ' ' ‘ K J a ■ BI j THE STEPS IN BUDDING. the kpift- cut lengthwise of the branch, just through the bayk, a slit about 11,-?I 1 ,-? inches long, and at the top of this j slit cut. across about m inch, as shown at a. Next remove from a ( branch [ of the same season’s growth of the desired variety one of the strong, healthy I buds by cutting front below the bud up and tinder it. Start about 1 inch be- ' low the bud and come out again 1 inch ! above the bud, as at b. Cut deep enough into the wood so as not to inI jure the bud, and cut it so as not to l.ave too much wood under the bud. I Then ‘place the bud, c, on the end of the 'toiil'e and push down info the slit, ■as above described. Push Securely in ■ place, so that the- bud is about 1 inch below the upper cut. Then wrap care'fully with yarn, as at d. In two or three weeks examine and see if the bud lias grown fast and so that the yarn is not injuring it. Should the yarn be loose, retie. The bud should start to grow the following spring. Success largely depends upon whether the stock is growing vigorously or whether the bud is healthy 1 . The bud serves the same purpose as the scion in grafting. 'From it springs a limb which will produce the kind of fruit borne l>y 'the tree from which the bud was taken. —W. H. Underwood, in Farm and Home. Curtain Front Poultry House. The style of curtain front “ house shown is of the shanty roof type, 8 feet 6 inches high .at the front and 4 feet 6 inches at the rear. The width of this If 1 h=o I ET H • ' : r—- ' - . 111 I ' f,' j b CUItTAIN FRONT POULTRY HOUSE. . ———H —-— — 4— — ; — oi any of the houses may be varied to suit tiie builder. The front of this house consists of a curtain on a frame, hinged in such away that it may be swung to the roof to allow the sunshine to enter. The plans of the curtain front houses lend themselves to the construction of an enclosed house by. using lumber instead of cotton. The roosts, nest boxes, drop boards and in fact all interior fixtures, should be constructed and put up in sue.h a ' _• • Fj/ Ejl ir .-ir. ir-r-jrTT INTERIOR FIXTURES. „ way that they may be easily removed for cleaning and disinfection. The diagram illustrates how they may be arranged with advantage in any house. The roosts should rest in sockets, and the drop boards should not be nailed in place, but simply rest on the cleats at the ends. Getting a Start with Sheep. When the farmers in the corn and grass states reach the point where they, have their fields. all. fenced hog tight, they, should not delay for any considerable length of time getting a start in sheep, says Wallace's Farmer. It is not necessary to have a large flock. It' is a good deal better not to have it for two or three reasons: One Is that sheep 'do not do well with hogs and cattle. This is the reason why so few sheep are kept in the hog and cattle country. Another reason is that those who have had no experience in sheep would do well to advance slowly, and, if need be retreat rapidly. Twenty-five ewes and a good buck are as many as the inexperienced farmer should start with. The

expense of these is comparatively small, the possible loss therefore not great in case the man should prove not to be a fit man to handle sheep. There are some men of this kind. The chancesofloss, however, are very spiall Where the farmer has any kind of sheep gumption about him. Testing the Health of an Animal. The pulse of a horse when at rest beats forty times per minute; of an ox from fifty to fifty-five; of a sheep and a pig about seventy to eight}’. The pulse may be felt wherever a big* 1 artery crosses a bone. It is generally examined in the horse on the cord which passes over the bone of the lower jaw in front of its curved position, ol in the bony ridge above the eye; and in cattle over the middle of the first rib; in sheep by placing the hand on the left side, where the beating of the heart may be felt. Any material variations of the pulse from the figures given above may be considered as a sign of disease. If. rapid, hard and full it is an iiidica-j tipn of high fever or inflammation; if. rapid, small and weak, low fever, loss of blood or weakness. If slow, the possibilities point to brain disease, and if irregular to heart troubles. The Black Raspberry. The black raspberry has its peculiarities, and among them is that of the annual travel to new soil by means of the tips. Stocks from the hill are comparatively worthless for new plantations; and growers of valuable varieties must obtain their plants from the. tips of the present.year’s growth. The first part of July, if it has not been attended to sooner, when the growing canes have reached the height of 4 feet, nip out tlie point with thumb and finger, and soon branches will come out along the cane, increasing the number to take root, and adding to the productiveness of the plant the next season. Leave the bearing cane in its place until fall. Later, when it is time for the tips to attach themselves to the soil, the rooting can be facilitated by a slight covering of dirt. In preparing for the crop in spring head in the branches to two or three feet, according to their strength. Intensive Farming. The possibilities of a small fariii under intensive cultivation are strikingly shown in the following record of production from eleven acres, located near Reading. Pa.: Three thousand six hundred and fifteen .bunches of radishes, 30 bushels of white China radishes, 775 bushels of onions, 1,800 bakes of strawberries, G 75 bunches, and 20 bushels of beets, 500 quarts of lima beans. 12 bushels of soup beans, 75 bushrils of peas, 63 bushels of string beans, 125 bushels of potatoes. 440 baskets of tomatoes, 1,000 heads of Jettuce, 5,000 heads of cabbage, 600 dozen ears of corn, 125 baskets of egg plant, 100,000 pickles, 40 bushels of turnips, 12 bushels of carrots, 35 bushels of parsnips, 1.000 roots of horseradish. 2,000 stalks of endive, 20,000 stalks of celery. 25 bushels of artichokes, and 8 bushels of popcorn. Sow Fall Wheat Early. In the great corn belt of the Middle West most farmers are afraid their wheat will make too. much top in the fall and sow very late in order to avoid the Hessian fly. As a rule, however, it is better to sow early enough to get eight or ten inches growth. Harrow the seed bed frequently, making a fine dust mulch, which will conserve moisture and cause regular germination. Wheat put in this way makes a stronger growth in the spring and matures at least a week earlier. If early and late seeded wheat come through the winter without injury the early wheat will always oiityield the other, although it. may have a tendency to lodge. Watch your own wheat next spring and see iiow it comes out and then sow next fall at a time to make it better the following year. Science vs. Superstition. 111-considered advertising of divining rod achievements is pointed out by a British engineer as a serious injustice to hydrogeological experts and artesian engineers. The mysterious twig shows water no oftener than ordinary guessing. Science Jias a far better record, and. in his own experience water has been found in hundreds of places all over Great Britain by the study of geology and physical geography, not one attempt in fifty having failed where success was confidently expected, and hardly a success having been recorded where conditions seemed adverse. Largest Duck Farm. Australia is said to have the largest duck farm and the largest incubator in the world. The incubator has a capacity of 11,440 duck eggs or 14,080 hen eggs. The machine is, in fact, a hothouse. It stands in open ground and is constructed of ordinary pine boards, with corrugated iron roof. The egg trays each hold 130 duck or 160 hen eggs, and there are four of these trays, end to end, in eleven tiers, one above the other on each side of the room, making a total of eighty-eight. Value of Humus. That soils need humus is shown by the recent test at the West Virginia station. The ash of stable manure, even when applied with sodium nitrate, did not show as large returns as when' stable manure alone was applied. In a number of cases it is humus and not latent plant food elements that the farmer’s soil needs. See that the soil is rich in organic matter first, then if it fails to produce, apply the plant food elements in the prepared forms.

l\ Rhubarb Marmalade. Four pounds rhubarb. 4 offinges. juice of all. peel of 2LLpouilds susjqr. 1 lemon, 2 pounds’ raisins. Peel and cut the rhubarb info half-inch.pieces. Pre pare the oranges by squeezing out juice and'cooking the peel in water till tender. Drain and scrape out white skin. Extract the juice of the lemon Put tlie rhubarb into a granite presery ing kettle, heat it Slowly-to boiling cook fifteen minutes, then add the ! sugar, orange juice and peel, lemon juice and raisins, and cook slowly until thick. This is delicious fresh, and a portion may be sealed for future use Apple Pudding. ■ * Four cups flour, 1 level teaspoon salt 6 level teaspoons baking powder, 4 level ! tablespoons butter, 2 cups milk, 2 cups finely chopped apple, one-half cup but | ter, 2 cups sugar, 1% quarts water. I Sift together the flour, salt and bak ’ ing powder. Work in the butter witl the fingers and add the milk. Mix well turn onto floured board, -roll out one half inch thick, I cover with the apph and roll up like a jelly roll. Press the ends together and press down the sides to keep the apple in. Place in a but tered pan and add the butter, sugar anc water. Bake in a moderate oven foi one and one-half hours. Fried Chicken. I Clean and joint, two small “fryers,’ Put two- tablespoons each of butter anc lard in a baking pan and melt. Rol. the chicken in flour that has been well seasoned with salt and pepper and laj in the pan, making only one layer Place the pari iri the oven and whet the chicken is brown on one side 4uri it .over. When done remove to a plat ter. garnish with parsley and serve; with gravy made in the pan. This' saves the discomfort of t’fyirig in 81 skillet and also insures a well eookec ! chicken. Cream and Spinach -Soup. Wash and look over thoroughly twe quarts spinach, then cook in a little boiling salted water until soft enough to rub through a colander. Heat tc the scalding point in a double boilei a quart of milk and thicken with a tablespoonful of flour, rubbed smooth with a tablespoonful butter. Add the spinach,' season to taste, and send tc the table with a spoonful of whipped cream on each plate. Serve with croutons. j ’I - Butter Cake. To make- it one creams one table spoonful of butter. Then add a £up oi sugar, two eggs, separately, stirring between each addition; two-thirds ol a cup of milk, one and a half cups oi flour mixed with one teaspoon baking powder. “When nearly done poui plenty of melted butter over,” sprinkle with powdered sugar and bake until a good brown. This sounds well worth trying, and! one Is willing to believe it delicious. Cider Cup. One quart of cider, two bottles of soda water, one bottle lemonade, - one heaping tablespoonful-of granulated sugar, a sprig of mint and 2 inches of cucumber. Cut the cucumber into slices without peeling it. Place it in a pitcher with the sugar, cider and . mint. Allow it to stand, on ice if possible, for two hours. Then add the lemonade and soda water and a few pieces of ice, removing the mint. Short Suggrestions. In choosing a grape fruit see that it is heavy in proportion to the size. A dry fruit is very light. Tq polish a looking glass first rut it With a duster wrung out of cold water and dipped in whiting and then polish with a dry cloth. Turn hot water cans upside down , each time after using. It is the drop of water left that causes- rust, and that is soon followed by a hole. If canned fruits are opened an houi or two before using the excluded oxygen is regained and the flavor improved. Turn out of the jar at once As soon as a salt ham or tongue is cooked remove it from the boiling wader to a pan of dold water for a few seconds. This will loosen the skin, which may be easily peeled off. To prevent cabbage boiling over saves time, both in stirring the cabbage down and also in cleaning the stove afterward. If a piece of lard about the size of a walnut be dropped into the cabbage pot it will not boil over. If, when boiling ,ham, you add foi ?ach gallon of water a teacup of vinegar and six or eigHt cloves the flavor will be much improved. Always let a ham cool in the water In which it is boiled and it will keep deliciously moist and nice. Nickel plating may be cleaned' fc with water and whiting or with water and alcohol as easily as silver. Where there is a large amount of nickel to be cleaned gasoline will do the work well and quickly, but of course extra precautions must be taken.

Turning • Tight Screw. Any one who has attempted to remove a very tight screw’ knows what a very difficult business it is. Aftei straining and twisting for a considerable time the operator frequent ly ends by losing his temper and de stroying the bite of the screw, which remains fixed as tightly as ever. With the aid of a pair of pinchers, however, the affair is quite a simple one. Place the screwdriver in position and ther catch hold of the blade with the pinch ers just above the head of the screw. Press the screwdriver firmly and at the same time twist round the blade with thd pinchers. The tightest screw ‘ will yield immediately to this sort ol persuasion. FIVE MONTHS IN HOSPITAL. Diiehargefl Because Doctors Could Not Cure. Levi P. - Brockway, S. Second Ave.. Anoka. Jtflnn.. says: “After lying for

five months in a hospital I was discharged as incurable, and given only six months to live. My heart was affected. I had smothering spells and sometimes fell, unconscious. I got so I couldn't use my arms, my eyesight was impaired and the kidney secretions were badly

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disordered. I wSs worn out and discouraged when I began using Doan’s kidney Pills, but they went right to the cause of the trouble and did their work well. I have been feeling well ever since.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A Fowl That Won a pattie. A singular story is told of a gallant cock whose moral influence at a critical moment during the battle at Sf. Vincent helped to save a British man-of-war from the hands of the enemy. The fowl in question formed part of the live stock of the Marlborough, a vessel which had 4 suffered so severely that her captain tyas considering the advisability of striking his flag. The ship was entirely cjsmasted, while the chief officers had !>een carried below severely wounded, jnd the crew, without anybody to them up. were beginning to grovf sullen under the heavy fire of the eifemy. to which they were hardly able lb respond. At this emergency a shot the coop in which the fowls ’iere confined. Ihe only surviving occlpant, a cock, finding himself at lilirty, fluttered up and perched himsdlf on the stump of the mainmast andjsurveyed the scene of carnage around fiim. Then, flapping his wings in defiance, he began to crow vociferously. He ~was answered by three hearty andtexhilarating cheers from the crew, ijho all had a good laugh and, with spirits thus renewed, continued the act! >n with a vigor that lasted until a tuA in the battle rescued them from bjeir tight position.— London Chronicle.* — A Brother Artist. Photographer—Plrdon me, sir, but is that as pleasing in expression as you can assume? Sitter— Yes, sir;yl’m doing the best I can to look pleasai t. Photographer —T iere is an excellent facial specialist tw i doors down the corridor to the right.' May I suggest that you drop in' there i or a few minutes and have him block out a smile for you? How He tjot the Idea. “Ma I” “Yes, dearest; 'that is it?” -“Did you get n y baby sister at the grocery?” » “Os course not. | Whatever put such an idea in your h£ad?” “It says,on the Jrocer’s wagon, ‘Families supplied.’ ” —|udge. ALMOST A SHADOW. Gained 20 Ibo. on Grape-Nuts. There’s a wonderful difference between a food whiah merely tastes good and one which binlds up strength and good healthy flesli It makes no difference how much we eat unless we cai| digest it. It is not really food to tire system until it is absorbed. A woman says: “I had been a yufferer for ten years with stomach aid liver trouble, and had got so bad that the, least bit of food such as I tllen knew, would give me untold misery for hours after eating. “I lost flesh uptil I was almost a shadow Os my ifriginal self and my friends were quitq alarmed about me. “First I drop ( Jed coffee and used Postum, then begin to use Grape-Nuts, although I had little faith it would do me any good. - “But I to use the food and have (gained twenty pounds in weight and; I feel like another person in every way. J feel as if life had truly begun aney < for me. “I can eat an Idling I like now in moderation, suffeFno ill effects, be on my feet from ijorning until night. Whereas a year jfgo they had to send me away from heme for rest while others cleaned housf for me, this spring I have been ablf to do it myself all alone. ’ “My breakfast -is simply Grape-Nuts with cream aid Postum, with sometimes an egf?ahd a piece of toast, but generalljk ctily Grape-Nuts and Postum. Andt I |pan work until noon and not feel hs{ tired as one hour’s work would hauepnade me a year ago.” “There’s a Rease 0.” - Name given tii Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read above letter? A new one appears, from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest

Majority and Plurality. In politics the plurality is the greatest of more or two numbers and is also the excess of the highest number of voteg east for any one candidatt over the next highest number. When a candidate receives out of 10,(XX) votes cast 4.000 and two other candidates receive respectively 3,500 and 2.500, the first is elected by a plurality, though he has received less than a majority of the whole vote, and he is said to have a. plurality of 500 votes. If the numbers are 6.000,' 3.000 and 1.000. the majority is 2.000 and the plurality is 3.000. A majority, therefore. must be more than half the entire vote cast, and a candidate’s mejority is. then, the difference between the number of votes he fecefved and the ’combined number of votes cast for all other -candidates; his plurality is the difference between his own number and the number received by the candidate nearest to him. Oftentitnes a candidate receives a plurality, but not a majority. Unless there is a tie there is always a plurality.—Pathfinder. TheArtifttlc Temperament.“Yes,” said- Mrs. Nuritch, “my sor means to be an artist.” “Indeed?” . replied Mrs. Ascum "That’s a very laudable ambition.”. “Yes, he things it’s just cute those flowing black ties.”—Philadelphia Press. For Prudential lleasiohs. Customer (at- lunch counter) —Your eggs are fresh, aren't they/.' AVaiter Girl—Y-yes, sir; but I think you'll like them better in the form of an omelet.

8| Bjl* 1 ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. 3 AVcgelablePreparationforAsw sifnilaiinriiheFoodanilßegula n lin£(lieStomachsandßowelsof pajO Promotes Digestion.Cheerfii]’ Eli!g;'il : !i ness and Rest. Contains neitiiir Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. Rg j. Not Narcotic. £ecipe of Old. DrSiWJELPnUIER. II !i ' IlatuJdn Stfd~ . Ep'lJ Jl'cSeima * . < J MtUeSalts- I ■M ig 0 jtniseSeed * I Brag tea, / iffirSda* l Clarified Sugar • WwlsgreenFlanr. ' ( k ® Aperfect Remedy for Consflpation,Soui'Stoiuach.Diarriiora Isen u Worms,ConvalsionsJewrish- ® ness andlOSS OF SHEEP. Facsimile Signature of- - YORKEp32o Guaranteed Exact Copy of Wrapper.

Now for the Tourist Fakir. A workman was burning on an alpenstock the words “Jungfrau,” “Materhorn.” “Flusteraarhorn” and “Eiger.” As soon as he finished that task he applied a coat of varnish to a suitcase covered with red and yellow hotel labels. . “The explanation.” he said, “is that travelers, like fishermen, fake and blow. If the owner of that alpenstock had really ascended all those mountains, he’d have burnt their names in at the time. The varnish on his suitcase? Oh. that is to keep the labels from peeling off. “Summer is upon us. and till the late autumn I’ll burn on alpenstocks the names of inaccessible peaks, and I’ll varnish suitcases covered with the labels of the costliest hotels of Europe. “It’s odd how the poorest of us when abroad, stop, according to our labels, at Claridge’s in London and the Ritz in Paris.” In a Pinch, t’ne Allen’s Foot-Ease. A pow’der to shake into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching. Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nalls. Alien's Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Address Alien S. Olmsted, I« Iloy, N. Y. Uncle Allen. ■ “Jkfany a man,” reflected -Uncle Allen Sparks, “winds up his political career with a smasihup on account of not having a coaster brake on his mouth. —Chicago Tribune. Yellow Clothes Are Unsightly. Keep them white with Red Cross Ball Blue. All grocers sell large 2os. package, 5 cents. Wrong Figure. “What ails me, doctor, is that I been burning, too much midnight oil.” “Not at all, my young friend. It’s a candle you are using, and you have been bunting it at both ends.” Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup tor Children teething; softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 26 cents a bottle. A Russian does not become of age until he is twenty-six«

SHE COULD NOT WALK For Month!—Barninc Humor on Ankle*—Opiates Alone Brought Sleep—Ecsema Yielded to C*ti- <» eura. “I had eczema for over two years. I had two physicians, but they only gave me relief for a short time and I cannot enumerate the ointments and I lotions I used to no purpose. ‘ My ankles were one mass of sores. The Itch- . ' ing and burning were so intense that I I could not sleep. I could not walk for nearly four months. One day my husbandssaid I had better try the Cuticura Remedies. After using them three, times I had the best night’s months unless I-took an opiate., I used one set of Cuticura Soap. Ointment, and Pills, and my ankles healed in a short J time. It 1% now a year since I used Cuticura. and there has been no return of the eczema. Mrs. David Brown, Locke, Ark., May 18 and July 13, 1907.” Poor Man! Pearl—lt was a fashionable June wedding. Three columns were given [ over to a description of the bride. Ruby— -Gracious 1 Aqd did the bridegroom attract much attention? Pearl—A little. He was mentioned as “among those present.” ; If you use ball blue, get Red Cross Ball Blue, the best ball blue. Large 2oz. package," 5 cents. Gave Rein to Her Thotighta. “Looks a bit like rain, ma’am,” observed the friendly milkman as he [ handed in his morning-pint. “It does, Indeed,” replied the readywitted housekeeper, with her gaze fixed I on the bottle. —Boston Transcript

CORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have I Always Bought Bears the ZyX (k Jr* * n Use l I ■■ fl ' \Ji For Over ! Thirty Years ICASTORIA THE CCHTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK OIYY.

Side Lights on Poesy. Scott was writing tflie “Lady of the Lake.” . , “If you were to tell the truth about her,” he said, “I should say that she is awfully seasick, but expects to feel better when the boat gets to St. Joe.” Thus it is. in all ages, that the poet has' to sink tihe Real in the Ideal.-—Chi-•?ago Tribune. The finances of Cape Colony have been [ hard hit by the depression in the diamond market.

8 THE BOWELS M 0 ft 25c. Dnqglrts

SMOKE cuds, WAND BE HAPPY

Texas Pan-Handle Farm Lands Come to our Chicago Office and go with us on Special Trale TUESDAY, AUGUST 4TH To afkmihe our FARM LANDS, equal to any In CENTRAL STATES. Our Price, are so LOW and TERMS so very REASONABLE you will buy. LOCATORS LAND COMPANY 646 National Bank Bldg., Chicago, 111 DAISY FLY KILLER

F. W. N. U. No. 33—1908 When writing; to Advertisers please say you saw the Adv. in this paper.

oJaan, ornamental I convenient, cheap. Laete all Beason. Absolutely hariulesai will not soil or injure anything: ouar> an teed effective. All dealers ot | sent prepaid for 20e. Harold Semen. 149 HeKalb avZ t Brooklyn. N. Y.