The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 February 1909 — Page 7

FOURYEARS OFMISERY Cured by Lydia E. Pink= barn’s Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md. —“For four years my life was a misery to me. I suffered

I from irregularities, terrible dragging sensations, extreme nervous-! ness, and that all gone feeling in my stomach. I had given up hope of ever being well when I began to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Then I felt as though | new life had been

1 ♦ E’W ' ■ Bit. * ■|gOf| I 1

given me, and I am recommending it to all Iny friends.” —Mrs. W. S. Ford, I 1938 Lansdowne St., Baltimore, Md. The most successful remedy in this | country for the cure of all forms of , female complaints is Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It has stood the "test of years and to-day is more widely and successfully used than any other female remedy. It has cured I thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, ; that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other-means had failed. If you are sufferingfrom any of these ailments, don't-give up hope until you have given Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound< trial. If you would like special advice write to Mrs. Pinkham, Eynn, Mass., for it. She has guided thousands to health, free of Charge. . . J 1 2 —— I

IWff&UGLAS | S 3PV, shoes <350 I

I ■ vidil y BUYS SHOES y J L- — .VjkjUf n.ooTCSa.oo ' ■ s The Reason I Make and Sell More Men’s $3.00 $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer ia because I give the wearer the benefit of the most compl :te organization of trained experts and skilled shoemakers in the country. The selection of the leathers for each part of the shce, and every detail of the making in every department, is look'd after by the best shoemakers in the shoe industry; 111 could show you how carefully W. L Douglas shoes u are made, you would then understand why they hold their ihape, lit better, and wear longer than any other make. My Tanning the Soles makes them More Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others. Shoe# for Every Member of the Family t Men. Boya, Women,M iasea and Children. For sale by shoe dealers everywhere. nAIITIHM I None genuine without W. L. Douglas UnU I lull ■ name and price stamped on bottom. Fast Color Eyelets Used Exclusively. Catalog mailed fret. y W. L. DOUGLAS, 167 Spark St./Brockton, .Hass. . __ ; ———————l The difference remember this—it may eave your life. Cathartics, • bird shot and cannon ball pills—tea spoon doses of cathartic medicines all. depend on irritation of the bowels until they sweat enough to move. Cascarets strengthen the bowel muscles so they creep and crawl naturally. This means a cure and only through Cascarets can you get it quickly and I naturally. H Cascarets —10c box—week’s treat-ment.-AU druggists. Biggrest seller ’in the world —million boxes a month.

GREAT BEARDLESS ‘ 1 BARLEY. *7 |

SILVER KING BARLEY JB. jgtfSJT Wisconsin la famed as the best tarWEa J pSSSIfc iey Btate ln the Union. Certain /tjga Jt Ja that it produces the heaviest yielding barleys on earth. ifc OF 60 VAf IETb ES Ws 9 wi'W?- tested by the Wisconsin AgriCßl turalStation.Salzer’s Silver King Barfey heads the list as the biggest SkrTF^X<’ yielder! That’s a record we are WW P roud Bu t It’s what Salzer s 'fvL? seeds do everywhere.

Wife SALZER’S BILLION DOLLAR BRASS ABD TEOSIHTE Wilf VAptM Billion Dollar Grass covered Itself with glory In 1908. It’s hay crop to the wtil bf *> .■> United States alone Is estimated at 810.000.000,00. It will be mueh. more for «w BSE JPglß’S' costs but «0c to 90c per acre. Isready with Its first crop within six weeksafter t!%SSn!S£& - seeding and seldom yields less than 6To 12 tons per acre of magnificent hay. 3 TEOSINTE, well, the catalog tells of this 100 ton green food freak. . /jgejgffineA'w / PURE CLOVER AND TIMOTHY SEED K Salzer’s 20th Century strains of cloverand timothy seed stand all alone in r their absolute purity. Os course they cost more than any other seedsmans but they are tree from weeds. That’s worth the difference. .wb?i 'We have by all odds,the largest Seed Potato trade in the World—(CaVsarrvgS'on® •* our cei!a ’'’ ho,<,s 60 .0 0tl Bushels I 'I £*"BIG CATALOG FREE-W& jfW’ *■» OrfortOo In stamps we mall freeof all costs samples of Silver King Bar- K W tSwW W 3 let. yielding 173 bu. peracre; Macaroni Wheat, yielding 64 bu. per acre- IsSwL ds\iK Odilon Dollar Grass; Speltz, the cereal and hav food prodigy, together with OKAaE timothy, ciover, grasses, etc., easily worth *IO.OO of any man’s money to W warSww get a start therewith. Wl vft."wSiß3r And if y° a ' Bcnd 14e we odd t 0 above a package of Farm Seed Novelty wmSMSWT never seen by you before,

pOHNA.SALZE £ sEEP.c

CURETHE CHILDREN’S COUGH gg gfl before the constant hacking tears the delicate membrane of throat and Km lungs, exposing them to the ravages of deadly disease. Piso’s Cure MM goes straight to the seat of the trouble, stops the cough, strengthens |2*g ■I the lungs, and quickly relieves unhealthy conditions. Because of its ggffi {£•l pleasant taste and freedom from dangerous ingredients it is the ideal ISgH fgfj remedy for children. At the first symptoms of a cough or cold in Iml the little ones you will save sorrow and suffering if you MM 181 GIVE THEM PISO’S CURE J

?■ r ’ . f IN AGONY 1 WITH ECZEMA. Whole Body a Mass of Raw, Bleed* lug, Torturing Humor —Hair All Fell Out—Hoped Death Would End Fearful Suffering—ln Despair—• Cured by Cuticura. ‘‘Words- cannot describe the terrible eczema I suffered with. It broke out on my head and kept spreading until it covered by whole body. I was almost a solid mass of sores from head Ito foot. I looked more like a piece of I raw beef than a human being. The pain and agony I endured seemed more than I could bear. Blood and pus oozed from the great Sore on my scalp, from under my finger nails, and riearily all over my body. My ears were so crusted and swollen I was afraid they : would break off. Every hair in my head fell out. I could not sit down, I for my clothes would; stick to the raw [ and bleeding flesh, making me cry out from the pain. My family doctor did all he could, but I got worse and i worse. My condition Was awful. I did not think I could live, and wanted death to come and end; my frightful . sufferings. ! “In this condition my mother-in-law : begged me to. try the Cuticura Rem- ; edies. I said I would, but had no hope ! of recovery. But oh. what blessed r*- | Mes I experienced after applying Cutl- [ cura Ointment. It cooled the bleeding I and itching flesh, and brought me the i first real sleep I had had in weeks. It | was as grateful as Ice 'to a burning I tongue. I would bathe with warm j water and Cuticura Soap, then apply the Ointment freely. I also took Cutl- ' cura Resolvent for the blood. In a ! short time the sores stopped running, the flesh began to heal, and I knew I was to get well again. Then the hair on my head began to grow, and in a short time I was completely cured. I . wish I could tell everybody who has eczema to use .Cuticura. Mrs. Win. Hunt. 135 Thomas St.,: Newark, N. H., Sept. 28. 1008.” C Potter Drug & Corp.. Sole Props, of Cuticura ijteniedies, Boston. I A Generous Gift. Professor •Munyon has issued a most beautiful, useful and complete almanac. It contains put [only all the scientific information concerning the moon’s phases, in all the latitudes, but has illusj (rated articles on how t® read character •I by. phrenology, palmistry and. birth month. It also tells all .-about card redding, birth stones and dhfir meaning, and gives the interpretation lof dreams. It teaches beauty culture, ipanicuring, gives weights and measures and antidotes for poison. In fact, it is [a Magazine Almanac, that not only gives valuable information. but will afford much amusement for every member of the family, especially for parties and evening entertainments. Farmers arid people in the rural- districts will find [this-' Alfhanac. almost invaluable. "I • It will be sent to anyone absolutely free on application to the Munyon Remedy Company, Philadelphia, Pa. $33.00 Personally Conducted Ex\cnrsions. Colonists’ one-way tickets, Chicago to the Pacific coast.’ via the Chicago, I ilion Pacific and Northwestern Line, are oh sale daily during March and ‘ April at the rate of S3?.QO. Correspondingly low rates from all points. Double Jierth in tourist sleeping car only I $7.00, through without change to San [ Francisco. Los Angeles and Portland. I No extra charge on our personally coni' ducted tours. . Write for itinerary and full particulars to S. A. Hutchison, Manager ‘Tourist- Department, 212 Clark street, Chicago, 111, This paper contains the advertisement of the wonderful Danysz Virus prepared by Dr. Danysz of the Pasteur Institute, Paris. This preparation is in use all over Europe in ridding dwellings and stables in cities and villages of rats and - mice, and it is now being put on sale with all dealers in Upited 'States, where its success will doubtless 'equal that abroad.

EmperorWiliiam OAT ; Our new Em perorWH. ( ilam oat is the great- Wr est oat of the century. Almost as g reat as the wEpF Emperor himself. You fwSa 1 Will want It. It’s » Stif ’ marvel. Big trial package, 60

BEARDLESS BARLEY The barley of your dreams; no beards; easy to harvest, yielding in New York state 121 bushels per acre.

Oeviewomndiana]

The Rev. J. N. Field, former pastor of the First Baptist church in Fort Wayne, is to be the president of the new university. for Southern California Baptists at Redlands, which he has been laboring several years to establish. William Neal, who left thirty years ago for the West, and has not communicated with relatives in all the intervening time, will return for a visit at Ossian, where his mother is Mving at the age of 80 years. Friends have mourned him as dead. The contract for the new ?30,000 schoolhouse at pxford has been let to the Oxford Lumber Company. The bid for the building was $26,222. A. E. Werkoff, of Lafayette, got the heating contract at $2,957, and Norman Titsworth, of Oxford, the plumbing contract at $1,265. A movement is on foot at Columbus to form a company for the manufacture of automobile delivery Wagons. Several merchants have signified their intention of installing motor wagons for delivery purposes and nearly all of the capital needed for the new venture has been subscribed. W. F. Blaylock, his wife and four children, of Muncie, are all in a serious condition from the effects of eating wild parsnips and horseradish. Presumably it’was the wild parsnips that caused the trouble. Soon after eating supper the entire family became ill and physicians were hurriedly sum.moned. Stella Chastan sought to surprise her cousin. Viola Webster, by getting married to Charles Peterson, and Viola had a. scheme to surprise Stella by being married to Arrin A, Barnes at Terre Haute. Fate was against both girls, for they met in the County ‘ Clerk’s office when obtaining marriage [ licenses. Then there was a double' wedding in a magistrate’s office nearby. Riley Johns, of Greenfield, after a trial in the Circuit Court, was fined $1 and sent to jail for sixty days.. He stole a bale, of hay valued at 60 cents from George T.-Johnson, a farmer.! This punishment is a day in jail for each penny. Johns did not deny the theft, but after he took it he went to the owner and offered to pay him. He is a one-armed man, with a wife and three small children. Mrs. Elvina Dodson, wife of Edward Dodson, of Muncie, is under arrest on j a charge of having thrown red pepper j in her husband’s eyes. Dodson was j hurriedly taken to a physician after j the pepper throwing episode and Was found to be in a serious condition from the effects of the pepper. He says the ! pepper was thrown during the- progress of a family quarrel. Mrs. Dodson' admits it, but sets up a plea of self-defense. . While children were playing in the yard at a country schoolhouse near Bedford, a dog, believed to have been suffering from rabies, ran into the yard and bit Charles Brumaker, 12 years old, and Jessie Sinclair, 12 years old. The dog was killed by the teacher, O. M. Calglazer. After killing the dog he telephoned to Bedford for a physician. [ The dog is said to be a strange one in [ that neighborhood, and the residents say it had bitten a number of cattle. Work has begun on a concrete and steel grain elevator for McDonald & Co., of New Albany, the first of its kind erected in that section. No wood will be used in its construction, and it. is expected to be fire-proof. The construction work is being done by the McDonald Engineering Company, of Chicago,, which is working three gangs of men in eight-hour shifts, without interruption, in order that there will be no seams in the concrete, which will “set” in one solid mass. The building [ will not be completed for four months. With the addition of the big gas well [ drilled in-by the Pure Oil Company the output of gas in the oil fields in the eastern part of Gibson County and the lower edge of Pike Cohnty is estimated by conservative gas and oil men to be 15,000,000 cubic feet a day. It is . believed the new well will produce 3,000,000 cubic feet daily. It is probably the larjgest in the new territory. With such an output it is estimated j that the field could supply not only I Oakland City, but Evansville and Princeton with all the gas needed for ■ general use. Contracts are now being made for a game reserve of 10,000 acres, in Hamilton County. The reserve will consist of all of that land north of White river for a distance of six miles and lying between the lines of the Indiana Union Traction line and the rivet. Later on an effort will be made to include several farms east of the river, in the vi.cinity of Clare and Strawtown. This territory will be. provided with Bohemian'quails, which will be furnished by the State’and they will be protected by law for five years. Dr. Isaac Austin and.. John Zelt, who have been active in starting the plan, expect to receive the first shipment of quail soon. A chicken-picking machine invented by Berling & Painter, of Decatur, is said to be a success. It is expected that the machine can be driven by an electric motor, and will denude poultry in short order. < The Selvin Creamery. Company paid out $5,500 last year to farmers around the little town tor milk. The take their milk to the creamery, where it is separated from the cream. The farmers then take the milk back with them for their hogs.

Farmers in the vicinity of Topeka ( are endeavoring to organize a co-oper-. ; ative company to purchase and conduct the Topeka grain elevators. . ’ No real estate in Adams County is ( delinquent for taxes, the last payment !. having been made and the Scheduled sale of lands for raxes will not occur. . A pet dog, owned by Mrs. Lillian Black, died in New York arid its car- 1 cas was shipped by express to Warsaw ; ■ to be buried after a funeral notice had been printed iri a Warsaw paper. ■Losses of the Whitley County Farmers’ Mutual Insurance Company sincb last May. aggregated $6,350.42, and an assessment of 15 cents on each SIOO of; insurance is being levied to meet it. |. Mrs Evans Riggsby, whose husband, was horseshoer for Abraham Lincoln while Mr. Riggsby had a blacksmith shop at Charleston, 111., died at th© home of her granddaughter, Mrs. Fiet* cher, in Anderson. Rev. Robert Routledge, of Huntington, has decided to accept the presidency of the El Cristo College in Cuba. He has resigned the pastorate of the Baptist church at Huntington and will leave March 13 for Cuba. ‘ A 3-year-old child tending a 4-months-old baby of Joseph Aubrey, Os Terre Haute, pushed the baby wagon against the kitchen stove, upsetting a ‘ coffee pot, whose scalding contents went on the baby and caused its death. In order to aid the good roads movement. Morgan Ware, a pioneer resident of Huntington, has offered to pay the expense of rolling the first two miles of gravel road that any gravel road superintendent or township trustee will .* build. , First the thumb on the hand of Delbert Jordan,’Of Terre Haute, was amputated when blood poisoning Set in from a scratch by a briar, and then the arm near the shoulder was taken off, and still it is not believed his life can bo saved. When a mad dog snapped at Chie’. of Police Coleman of Linton, he fired, the bullet going through the dog and, hitting the curbing < across; the street, went through a plate glass window of J. M. Wolford & Son’s store, and almost shot one of the young lady clerks: 1 The Knights of-Pythias of Jasonville, who lost their building by fire several weeks ago, are preparing plans for a better building than they had: before. The bids will be. let in a few days for the construction of a two-story brick structure on the site of the old building. Miss Josephine .Willman, of Lafayette, was robbed of her purse containing $lO while kneeling at prayer in St. Boniface Catholic church in that city. A strange man was in the pew as she entered, and he hurriedly left the church while?-" the young woman was yet at her devotions. But for the pet bulldog of Amanda Foster, living in Westside, Mrs. Foster might have been killed by Jacob Mains, for whom .she acts as housekeeper. Mains came home drunk arid, knocking the woman uncoriscious on the floor, began to beat her when Mrs. Foster’s bulldog attacked the man and injured him severely. Mains was heavily fined, on admitting his guilt and proriiising to reform. ' Wilbur Hobbs, a High School boy, is laid up at his home in Bloomington as the result of an attack by a tramp. Young Hobbs had gone to the barn to feed his horse when a stranger jumped on him in the dark, knocking him down and striking at him with a pitchfork. The boy was unconscious for a While. He does not know whethdr it was a tramp or some one who has been stealing chickens and wished to [ •escape identity. * A 3-months-old child of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wilds, who live in East Columbus, probably saved their lives bpcause it insisted on. crying in the night. The father and mother of the baby were asleep when the little one began testing its voice and awakened both of them. They found the roof of their home in flames and about ready to fall in. About all they were able to save was what clothihg they could grab as they rushed out. Mrs. Annie Goodwin, .a boardinghouse keeper of A Gas City, has tiled in the Grant Circuit Court against James Bastian, a grocer of Gas , City, for $5,000 damages, alleging that the defendant has destroyed her business by placing her name on the blacklist of the Ga,S. City Grocers’ Association. Mrs. Goodwin further alleges that it was for the purpose of coercing. her into giving him all her trade that Bastian assailed her honesty and ruined her credit, which she says was necessary to carry on the extensive, business in keeping hei- boarding-house. . Mrs. Goodwin says it was in May, 1908, that she was unlawfully blacklisted and that since that time her business has been destroyed. She says that her occupation as boarding-house keeper was the sole means of supporting herself and three children. Ed ward Sweet, aged 64 years, a bond broker of Fort Wayne, has just remarried his former wife, from whom he was divorced twenty years ago, after fifteen years of married life. A daughter re-knit the old bonds of affection. Attracted by the peculiar actions of a small dog at a door, Mrs. F. E. Gilkison opened the door of a room in her residence at Shoals and found the interior in flames. The fire was speedily extinguished without material damage.

Put in More Wordi. “Now, Pejers,” said the teachtr, ' “what ie it makes the water of the sea_| I •o salty’ i' “Salt,” said Peters. “Next 1” said the teacher. “What is ; it makes the water of the sea so'; 1 salty?” i. “The salty quality of the sea water,” [ ‘ answered “Next,” ‘‘is due to the ad- i mixture of a sufficient quantity of! chloride of sodium to impart to the j 1 aqueous fluid with which it ;commin* gles a saline flavor, which is readily recognized by the organs of taste!” “Right, Next,” said the teacher. “Go up one!” . BACKACHE IS KIDNEYACHE. Usually There Are Other Symptoms to Prove It. Pain tn the back is pain in the kid- ; neys, in mast cases, and it points to the need of a special remedy to relieve !

and cure the con- ] gestion or inflam- | mation of the kidneys that is interfering with their work and causing that pain that makes you say: “Oh, my back!” David Bruce, Corydon, I says: “My back was so weak and lame I could hardly walk. The kidneys showed bad disorders. I ran

down until almost a skeleton. I thought there was no hope for me and nothing helped me until I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. I improved rap- , idly and finally became so well that the [ trouble never returned.” , | Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Somewhat” Rough on Society“Man.P [ At dinner one evening a well-known actress wasmosi amiabie to a very i young lieutenant who sat next to her. [ v He was mightily pleased at being on such good terms with a live actress. ] Suddenly sb© said, in her artless, pret- [ ty manner : “I am taking a boy's part : in a new play and I have been watchirig you ever since we were introduced. You don’t mind, do you?” . These Is more Catarrh in this section of the [country than al! other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many’ years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J-•-Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken internally In doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mrico.us surfaces of the. system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails |o cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. ; Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO., T :edo, O. ; S'ld by Druggists, ~sc. Take Hall's Family. Pills for constipation Curiosity Gratified., Former Customer (after a long absence)—What ha»^ become of the pretty blonde that used to feed the hungry at this liarich counter? ’ _ Dark Skinned Waiter Girl—l'm her. What you- goin' to order, sir? Distemper. In all its forms, among alb .ages of horses, as well as dogs, cured and all others in same stable prevented from having the disease with Spohn's Distemper Cure. Every bottle guaranteed. Over 500.000 bottles sffid last year. 5Q> cents and SI.OO a bottle. All druggists, or send : to manufacturers, Spohn Medical Co., Goshen, Ind. • Youthful Philosopher. A five-year-old boy on hearing grace . asked for the first time at breakfast gravely remarked; “I only say mj prayers at night. That is the dangerous time.”—Life. Here is Relief for Women. If you have pains in the back. Urinary; Bladder or Kidney trouble, and Want a certain, pleasant herb cure for woman’s ills, try Mother Gray’-s Austra-lian-Leaf. It is a safe and never-failing regulator-. At Druggists or by mail 50 cts. Sample package FREE. Address.; The Mother Gray Co.. Leßoy, N. Y. [ Bloodless Revolution. Reporter——But, Senator, in a govern ment, like ours, don't you believe in * th< principle of rotation in office? ■ ; Eminent Statesman—l certainly do young man. That’s why I have a revblv-! ing chair in my office. PILES CURED Ilk 6 TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Plies in 6 to 14 days or money refunded, j 50c. Forestalled. An old tale is related of a family named Wood, wliuse-younger members were-eoMectively called the "‘Splinters.’ There was a certain propriety in this nomenclature, just its there is in the ] suggestion made by tlie learned sei- : entist in the following story in Pick-; MM’p: ' “Now, what snail we name the baby?” inquired the professor's wife.- ' “Why. this speeies has been named!’’ i answered the professor, in astonishment. “lliis is a primate mammal, Homo sapiens.” Ji Wl

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Calar Bare gauds brighter uud ioster colurs Ibau auy alter dyu. Oae 10c package calars all libera. They th 11 cold water better tbaa aay elbcr dye. Yau cun dye aay garwoal withaul rigging apart. Write far tree boakief —Haw la Bye. Bleach aad Mix Calars. 2* AHOf DU VG CO.. Garncy. Illinois

J' What jSeneroaity Meanui. •Many peojUe get the credit of being generous who never felt a single gene erous impulse in their lives,” say» a close student of human nature. .“Their generosity, so called, has con-, sisted simply in formal, cold, grudging almsgiving, carried out at the call of duty and unaccompanied by any spontaneous burst of feeling or sympathy. “The highest generosity is full of [ strong,. unhesitating self-effacement and always inspires, except in debased natures, feelings of- gratitude and. affection. Almsgiving is one of the »east , of its attributes. It more often takes] ' the form of helpfulness, sympathy and understanding. It gives forth coriipassion and encouragement of a kind which is far beyond money value. ; ‘The secret of generosity is unself- ] ishness. and the way to acquire it is , to cultivate universal love” and syni; pathy “ —St. Paul Pioneer Press. i Fact and Fictioa. Fiction is stranger than truth, in ] spite of the proverb. A writer in the Atchison Globe gives a striking ex- '• ample of the contrast between “the - way it is in books” and real life.. In the books this is the method used: c “Outside the wind moaned unceasingly, its voice now that of a child which sobs with itself in the night, now that of a woman who suffers her great pain alone, 'as women have suffered since life began, as women must suffer til) life wears to its Weary end". And mingled with the wailing of wind, rain fell, fell heavily, intermittently, like tears wrung from souls of strong men.” ] f In real life we says “It's raining.” Brown's Bronchial TfocUps are of I great service in curing Hoarseness. [Coughs, ami Sore Throat. In boxes .25 cents. Samples mailed free. John 1. Brown & Son, Boston. Mass. Keeping; Ahead of “Yes. Nipper's a good one." said MaI son. trying to speak coolly of the bulli terrier at his heel. “My wile and I ; are awfully fond of him, but we-don't make fools of ourselves‘over him. as some lolks do over dogs that are not a patch cri Nipper.” "He looks all right,” said Rand, with as much warmth as could be expected from a man .whose interest is in tumblers and pointers. “He is all right,” corrected Mason, with dignity. “Why. that fellow knows everything you say to him. in German and French as well as ip .English. We’ve proved it again and again, and oi.Vy last night my wife said that if w© wanted to keep anything from him p we'd hav’e to learn a new language, .1 “I think,” concluded MaSon, gravely, “that we shall take up Esperanto when ( I the get longer.” I —— : —. ' . i Sore throat lead"'- to Tonsilitis, Quinsy and Diphtheria. Hamlins Wizard Oil ; used as.a gargle upon the first symptoms of a sore throat wiM invariably prevent all. three of these dread diseases. i Must Be Hard Work. In Russia there is a cheap reaping ! machine which has a reel but no an- ! tomatie rake. ■ A man sits on the platI form and rakes off the grain with a i pitchfork. The name of this machine ! Is “lobogreika,” and since “lobo” means I “brow.” and “greika” is “a heater,” [ < the whole can be translated “brow- ] sweater.” I If you wish beautiful, clear, white clothes, ; use Red Cross Ball Blue. Large 2oz. package, 5 cents / The Disturbing Telephone. “The telephone has destroyed'all the privacy of society,” said the society girl. “It breaks ip on everything. Nothing is sacred to it. You may be saying your prayers. The telephone. Or in the midst of your bath. The telephone. [ ! Or doing up your back hair. or. worst ! of all, a delightful man may be isak- ' ling love to you. ’ when k-ling, k-ling, , j k-ling! The telephone breaks off thej I thread of his tlienie and he fails to ; resume it.” ; ; ’ To restore a normal action to. I liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels, take Garfield Tea, the mild herb laxative. I . ' d— ' More Hnmane. ! “They tell me, Mr, Smithers,” simpered; the fluffy young thing, “that you are quite I ] a lady-killer.” “They do me an injustice, upon my i word. Miss Giggley,” responded the gab [ lant old beau, laying his hand on his heart I and making a profound bow; “I catch ’em alive.” . ’ '' Airs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Chil i dren teething; softens the gums, reduces in ; tnimmation. allays pain, cures wind, colic. 25 > ; cents, a bottld. - > I The-ppstoffiee at the naval station a' Guantanamo, Cuba, has been ■ officially .named Bagley, after Ensign Bagley, wh< was killed in the Spanish-American war A Domestic Eye Remedy I Compounded by Experienced. Physicians. Conforms to Pure Food and Drugs Laws. Wins Friends Wherever Used. Ask Drug- [ gists' for Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine in You? 'Eyes. You Will Like Murine. Muttou Birds; During six weeks every autumn the 400 inhabitants of the Australian Furneaux islands make enough money to support themselves in idleness the rest , of the year. They do this by catching the very fat young “mutton birds,” which are hatched there in such numbers that the flocks when they migrate extend for miles. They furnish food and oil, which is used for lubricating ■ purposes and also as a substitute for cod liver oil. ■ Very Low Colonist Rates Via Nickel Plate Road To points in the West, Northwest and Mexico, March 1 to April 30. Full information of Agent, or write F. P. Parnln, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. (2) ~

'COLDS Cl >ED IN ONE DAY s !l f M nyon’s Cold. Remhdy Relieves the hea . hroat and lungs almost Immediate--ly. C iecks, Fevers, stops Discharges of the u.se, takes away all ach-es and pains can by colds. It cures Grip and Ohs'it t > Coughs and prevents Pneumonia. Prii ■ 25c. H ' you stiff or swollen Joints, no matter i: .v chronic? Ask your druggist for Mtr < a's Rheumatism Remedy and see hov quickly you will be cured. If, you have' any kidney dr bladder trouble: et Munyon's Kidney Remedy. . ■ . JI nyon’s Vitallzer makes weak men •sire g and restores lost powers. • Mo cy Made in. Live Stock In Cene tral Canada. A . J. Henderson, visiting Seattle, wri ; cs to the Canadian Government age; t at Spokane, Wash., and saysf I have neighbors living there, arid rail rig wheat, barley and oats for the pas twenty years, and are now getting froi tile same land 20 to 30 bushels of beat per acre, 40 to 60 bushels of oat I was the first week of May when I g : my tent’ pitched, but trie farmers all r mild had finished putting in their cro's, so I only got fifteen acres broke am seeded. They advised me: as it wa: l ite, not to put in-mueli wheat, so I [> t in five acres wheat and ten acres oal one-half acre jiot.itoes and vegetable- AIT kinds of vegetables grow we! u]i there —-sweet corn, 1 tom.-itoes, oni :s. carrots, pdas. In ans. cabbage. My - igat yielded about 2o bushels pesf ner for which'l got 76 <-er.ts. ■ others got -i.i cents; oats thre-hed 35 bushels jier re. fiTf wliicb 1 got 35 cents j>er t bu> el. You see I was. threp weeks lati letting them in; still 1 was satisfie< ° t | 1 •' a my observation, there is more mo ey made in stock, such as’ attle. hor os and sheep, :is prices are high for su< . arid it costs mailing to raise the f, as horses live the year around out on the grass. In fact, fanners turn the • work horses out for the whiter am they come in fresh ami fat in the spr ng. ■ Cattle live out ‘seven or eight mo; l is. '- They ‘mow the prairie grass and stack it for Winter and give oat str'lw. My neighbors sold: steers, at s4< each, and any kind, of a horse that •car r low, from slsll up. I raised sixty clii k -ns and five pigs, as pork, chicdiem utter, and eggs pay welt ami ab i Wa s a good market for anything a mil raises, so I have every reason to be h trikfiil, besides at the eiu/of three ■ ye: i- I get my patent tor homestiad. I li ord of no homestead sei ling’for .less tin a $2,060, so where under the sun coi d an old man or young man do . bet er? , ■ , I . Teifin inolosy • C Selous Saievsinan-’-—M oufdn t you like Ito :5k at some of our overcoating's or [ sui rgs? ] 1 > -peptic Looking Customer —No. bnt lif will be kind enough to tell ■me wh' re the drug department is I'll.take a 100 at your pilfings and"poroOs plaster ! ing -Qhicago Tribune.

i'iRK? 320 ’• WiaACRES of Wheat Land ii i Western Canada WILL MAKE YOU RICH | b;0 bushelS per acre have been grown. General S' i dge greater than in any other part Os the Contjii. 'nt.' Under. New Regulations it i possible tn gv in a Homestead df .160 acres free, and additional 16 acres at $3.00 per acre.- : . ■ “ The development ,of the country has made marvellous strides.' It ,is a revela-" . lion, a rec-rd of conquest by settlements l that is remarkable.”—Extract from correspondence ,of a - National Editor, b Visited Canada in August last. ■ ~ ' “'he grain crop of 190$ will n t many fapnor $. .<0 to $25.00 per acre. Grain-raising, Mixed I filing and Dairying are the principal indust ‘ Cl innate is excellent: Social Conditions the ,t> Railway Advantages unequalled: Schools. , c nciies and markets dose at hand. inds may, also be purchased from Railway 8 :l Land Companies. POR "LAS! BEST WHST’ I mphlets, maps and information as tu f . u to wcure lowest Railway Rates, apply to ’ D. 'Scott. Superintendent- oi Immigration, t lawa. Canada, or Wi H. Rogers, -d Floor ’ , tion-Tertni'al Building, Indian ipdlis, Ind., l a H. M. Williams. 'Koi in 20, Law Building, -do, Ohio, Authorized iioverinnent Agents, t'-.ease say where you bttw this a.lvertisemerit. d your Letter Paper and Envelopes printed I this office, n; We tan give you the EAGLE LINO PAPER and ENVELOPES I ’■ ■ ! It is fine and will suit you. • Try it. )R SALE-Michigan Farms: All sizes. Southern and Central Michigan. Write for list and terms. Eldo Murray & Coly*Charlotte. Mich. f. W. N. U. - - - - No. 8—1909 When writing to Advertisers pieaae nay you saw the Adv. in this paper.