The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 52, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 April 1913 — Page 6

Among ibePctwyos.

EW are the white men who have ever set foot on the mysterious land of Putumayo, a wilderness the size of Kansas shut in between two tributaries of the Amazon. There are no railways, no roads, no telephones, no telegraph. For six months

7 1 ■"■ F

travel is possible by boat along the rivers. For three months the rivers drown one-half of the jungle, which takes the aspect of an imprecise and treacherous lake. For another three months the virgin forest is dotted everywhere with dangerous ooze holes, a paradise for all the deadliest bacteria. scorpions, snakes and all the

teilil, dVUipWUD, o animated nuisances which constitute the seamy side of the glorious _ tropical nature. This is the land of rubber. In tfh os e uncharted, mysterious forest many crimes have been committed by the white man/ if we are to be-, lieve the report drawn by Sir sR og e r Casement. English Investig at o r s have charged the Peruvian

government with refusing protection to the J unfortunate aborigines whom the trader’s greed has practically forced into the rubber tapping business. Peruvians, and among them a Peruvian judge, who passed through New York recently, and who had investigated the charges, answered that English traders were directly responsible for the Putumayo atrocities and that Peru, with its population of four millions, scattered over 700,000 square miles, cannot very well make the jungle as safe or safer than the neighborhood of the Metropole hotel, says the New York Tribune. One man arrived in New York the other day who has traveled the length and breadth of the Putumayo, and who, in the present controversy, has the good advantage of being neither a Peruvian nor an Englishman. His testimony, therefore, is likely to be more impartial than that of Sir Ito£er Casement or of Judge Romnlo Paredes. Georg von Hassel is German, as his name indicates, a civil engineer by profession, explorer, geographer and anthropologist by taste. He has directed in the course of ten years nine different expeditions to survey the northern regions of Peru, and has published four maps (the only ones In existence) of four different sections of the Putumayo. Finally, he has introduced in thmrubber regions an automatic rubbop tapping machine which will tn the near future enable the Indians to return undisturbed to their primeval Idleness. “There is no doubt,” Herr von Hassel said, “that the Putumayo natives have been handled very brutally on several occasions. Many have beeh killed, although the figures mentioned by muckrakers are ridiculously exaggerated. It has been stated that some 25,000 Putumayo have been murdered in the course of the last ten years. The truth is that there are not 100,000 wild Indians in the whole republic of Peru. In the Putumayo proper, which is the most Inhabitable part of the country, being right under the equator, I don’t think there are more than 3,000 aborigines. “On the other hand, you must not believe that the Putumayo Indian is the meek, bleating lamb described in certain reports unfavorable to both the Peruvian government and the English traders. The 107 Indian tribes Inhabiting the Peruvian forests are divided up into two main races, distinguishable by their weapons and their habits. Those living on the right bank of the Amazon are rather peaceful, using only one weapon, the bow, and they never poison their arrows. The tribes living on the left bank of the Amazon (and this includes the Putumayo region) are fond of fighting and use as weapons spears and blowpipes, whose darts are poisoned with curave. “Certain pieces of household furniture one finds very frequently in Indian huts give an inkling of what may happen to careless meddlers, be they white or copper-colored. Catching a member of a hostile tribe and bringing home his head is considered an excellent sport. The head Itself is a highly prized trophy. For reason of convenience the inside of the head Is removed, the teeth pulled out for use in making belts cr necklaces, the

DUEL ON VERGE OF PRECIPICE

A terrible struggle on a mountain pass, near a precipice of 3,000 feet, has taken place on the south slopes of the Bernina range, between an Italian officer and a private. An Italian custom house patrol under the command of Lieutenant Roccia, was visiting the Alpine posts in the Valteline on the Swiss frontier, when tho officer had to reprimand a soldier named Celi. This man determined to have revenge.

Fought to the Death. battle royal between four lions and three polar bears caused great excitement the other night in the village of Cauderan, near Bordeaux, France. A traveling circus, with a menagerie, had come to the village, and during the night four lions, which -were penned in a cage alongside three white bears, broke through the partitions and attacked the bears. There was a furious struggle between the •even wild beasts, and the whole village was awakened by their roars.

£23 x "

—? ■ •a" . — 77Y

lips are sewed up and the head Js then shrunk until it is hardly larger than a child’s fist. In certain tribes no man is allowed to marry unless he can show one of those little heads as evidence of his valor.” “Another ghastly thing which you see now and then is a ladle whose handle is made up of a dried human arm. This does not mean that the Indians are especially cruel and murderous. The white man has little to fear from them, provided he finds out all about a tribe’s habits and customs before venturing into an Indian settlement. If you see three round stones at the entrance to a hut it means: ‘Keep out, the master is out; there are only women and children within.’ “Disregard the warning, let the chief find you in his hut and soon after your head, conveniently' shrunk, may adorn the door of'his tent. “Three sticks laid on one another at a certain angle in front of the hut means: ‘Everybody out.’ Again death would be the penalty for trespassing. Shoot some of the Indians’ domestic animals and a little poisoned arrow will soon dispatch you into eternity It is the lay of the forest, and much as we may object to such a code of laws, it must be confessed that the Indians are very law-abiding people, “A rubber tree bearing the brand of one tapper is never tampered with by another tapper. Masses of coagulated rubber may be left in the fobest unprotected. The owner’s mark stamped upon each piece is enough to keep thieves away. “While forest Indians are not likely to molest a white man who observes all the rules of the jungle code, they seem to abhor the sight of a black man. Many of the difficulties which the Putumayo between Indians and rubber traders and led to acts of brutality on the part of the latter were due to the fact that the English-Amazon company employed Barbados negroes as foremen, The Indians called them ‘Taife’ or devils, and only worked under them when compelled by sheer violence. “The Huitoto tribe, from which most of the rubber tappers are recruited. presents curious characteristics. As many as a hundred families live in common under a strange-look-ing edifice called tombo, or tolpa. It is a sort of a cross between a hut and a tent, rising to a height of 40 or 50 feet. Jungle creepers are stretched upon a light conical timber frame, and then the whole thing is covered up with bamboo. From a distance it gives the impression of a traveling circus tent. It has no windows, and the doors are so low that one has to stoop considerable to penetrate into the tolpa. Around the circular space covered by the tolpa are separate groups of hammocks for the various families. Every family has its fire, on which a large kettle is kept simmering continuously. It contains a sort of meat stew which never seems to become exhausted, for. after every meal the women refill the kettle with fresh meat and seasoning, without ever emptying it. Over the fire hang pieces of fish or venison which are being cured by smoke. “The Huitotos have no definito form of worship. They believe in the existence of a superior being called Usinamu and of a lower element called Taife. They admit a future cx-

When the patrol was away on other , duty, Cell attacked his officer on a lonely Alpine pass, and attempted to i throw him over the precipice. A long struggle followed, the men being of I about equal strength and unarmed, i The officer, so save his life, bit > through an artery in the wrist of his I subordinate, who collapsed, owing to the loss of blood. Soon afterwards'the patrol arrived and carried Celi to a

The servants of the menagerie succeeded at last in separating the combatants, but when the victorious lions retired one of the bears was dead. As He Understood It. A school teacher, drilling her composition class in the relative value of words and phrases, asked one of the boys to write a sentence containing the phrase “horse sense.” After long labor this was produced: “My father didn't lock the barn door, an' he ain’t seen the horse sense.**

istence and manifest a certain respect to Itoma, the sun, and Fuel, the moon. They generally bury their dead in their own tent wrapped up in a new hammock, which contains all the weapons and utensils they used in the course of their lives. “The young Indian who wishes to be married goes to the tent where his beloved lived, cuts some wood for his future father-in-law and presents the cacique with a certain Quantity of cocoa and tobacco. Some fourteen ’ days afterward the young woman is allowed to follow her husband to his tolpa. This is the occasion for very picturesque festivities, parades and dances at which Huitoto belles display their talent in skin painting. All the time is heard the booming sound of the mangare calling from every Mil. “The mangare is a curious instrument, a sort of wireless of the jungle, which is used not only to express a tribe’s rejoicing, but to communicate ; the cacique’s orders to the men at ; work in the forest. It is a sort of i drum made by hollowing out two tree I trunks of slightly different size. By i striking the surface with a mallet i two different notes are produced, and I the various combinations of those two sounds permit the transmission of code signals very similar to the signs in the Morse alphabet. As the tents are generally built on top of high hills the sound of the mangare carries to a distance of from ten to sis- ! teen miles. “Certain travelers have stated that the Huitoto Indians, especially those of the Nonuya tribe, are anthropophagous. In the course of ten years I ' have never observed a single case of > cannibalism nor heard one mentioni ed by any reliable witness. As I said before, forest Indians are absolutely harmless as long as travelers respect the law of the various tribes. When forced to work beyond a certain limit or in unfavorable ' weathe£ they may revolt, as they did I in 1903, and drive their persecutors i out of the forest. For that matter, . they simply acted as perfectly civilized working men would act under similar circumstances. “Indians have no sense of value and no desire to earn money. They buy I supplies at any price, paying for them with large quantities of .rubber, ' and seem to have no idea of profit. It ' is rather difficult to demand steady : labor from such a type of humanity, j Traders have therefore tried to em- | ploy Chinese and Japanese laborers ; and also African negroes at gathering ■ rubber. No other race, however, can stand life in the tropical jungle. The i slightest exertion, even for those for!tunate enough to escape the jungle i fever, means a gradual weakening of ! the organism and death. j “The tapping of rubber trees Is I arduous work, and the fitting out of i rubber tapping expeditions is a costly enterprise. With the present methods of work, rubber trees can only be tapped six months a year, from October to December and from April to June. During January, February and March continuous tropical rains cause all the rivers to overflow and the forest becomes an uncharted swatnp. All I work must cease, human beings and [ animals alike must take refuge on . the hills. ' “In July, August and September the ! rubber trees shed their leaves and re- ! lapse into their annual slumber. They hardly give any latex or milk at that time, and the slightest wound on their trunk is likely to kill them. During that period, however, rubber trees can be more easily distinguished from the tropical growth which sometimes hides them entirely from view, and the Indians roam the forest locating new gomales. They make slow progress, for as soon as they leave the river bank they must travel on foot, carrying on their back provisions for several months. As soon as they have located a tree they cut down the ' underbrush around it with their ma- . chete and make a notch of a special . design on its bark. The tree thus ! becomes the absolute and undisputed property of the cauchero who finds it”

hospital in the valley, where he recovered. The military court which tried the case at Milan, Italy, took into consideration the sufferings and former good conduct of the soldier, and above all the refusal of his officervictim to prosecute, and sentenced Celi to six month’s imprisonment Logic of It. “That cross old teacher is as tough as leather.” “Perhaps that • accounts for his propensity for tanning hides.”

Large Annual Output of Dried Fruit. The approximate average annual output of dried fruit ia Cape Colony in recent years is stated officially as follows: Apricots, 200 tons; prunes, 400 tons; pears, 12 tons; peaches, 85 tons; raisins, 550 tons; figs, 25 tons; walnuts, 12 tons; apples, tons; almonds, 2*4 tons. The average woman asks her husband if he loves her in the same tone that she asks the grocer if the eggs he has in stock are nice and fresh.

wmr and ■■ SUPS ONE OVER ON FATHER Cleveland Youfh Buys Silver Mine for SIC,OCO and Sells It to Parent for $30,000. A certain Cleveland youth went out to Nevada a year or so ago to “seek his fortune,” as they say in the romances. And recently he returned home. His father had sent him forth that he might learn to stand on his own legs, we must understand —neither father or son was a pauper or anything like it. Well, when the boy got home he told his father that he had bought a silver mine for SIO,OOO. “I knew they’d get you, you unqualified dub!” stormed the father. “But, dad, I didn’t lose anything on it,” answered the kid. “You didn’t? Well, you did. But why do you think you didn’t?” “I formed a company and sold out for $30,000.” “You—you—where did you place the stock?” “In Cleveland.” “Great snakes! I’ll bet a million that I’m the man that bought it!” “Don’t bet, dad. You’d win. and I can’t afford to let you do that!” — Cleveland Plain Dealer. Courteous. A woman stopped the car at one of the avenues and, upon reaching the platform, attempted to get off on the wrong side. “The other side, madam,” said the conductor. “I want to get off on this side!” exclaimed the woman.” “You can’t do it, madam,” was the reply. “Conductor,” she said angrily, “I want to get off on this side of the car.” “Gentlemen, please step aside and let the lady climb the gate.”—Harper’s Magazine. Furnish a photograph. “This reporter wants my photograph.” “Well?” “Os what Interest to the public is impending divorce?” “Do not overlook the power of the press, my dear. When I was divorced the last time the papers published my photograph, and it got me a new husband almost immediately.” Additional Slight. “So the editor called your attention to a person whom he had employed expressly to throw poets out of his office?” “That’s what he did.” “Rather insulting.” “It was indeed. But what made the Insult greater was the fact that his official bouncer was a very small, insignificant looking person.” APPROPRIATE NAME. Sr 0 1 *>**•«• Magistrate (to colored man arrested for stealing chickens) —What is your name? Prisoner —Hennery, sah! Setting Her Right. Jennie—He must have a soft spot in In his heart for me. Wennie —Why so? Jennie—He says he is always thinking of me. Wennie —But you know, a man doesn’t think with his heart. The soft place must be in his head. Intolerant Attitude. “Brindlesburg is an old-fashioned town.” “Ante-bellum manners, and all that sort of thing?” “Well, not exactly that, but we still have a great many people here who look on the ‘angleworm wiggle’ as ah innovation of the devil.” Can You Beat It? “Gribble is the worst pessimist know.” “Why do you say that?” “fmet him this morning, so rich in joyous suggestions of spring, and what do you suppose he said?” “I can’t imagine.” “He said, ‘Well, we’ll soon be bothered with flies again? ” Carrying on the Metaphor. “All the world’s a stage,” said the ready made philosopher. “Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum, “and the glory seeker is very likely to find himself taking his compensation in stage money.” Foolish Question. “Mrs. Naggs has become a suffragette.” “Do you think Mr. Naggs will object?” “Did you aver a lamb worry a door*

BIRD DIDN’T SAY ANYTHING Mrs. O’Toole Kills and Bakes Parrot When It Failed to Make Itself Known to Her. O’Toole was passing a bird store when this sign caught his eye: “Step In. A Bargain Today.. An Elegant Poll Parrot Which Speaks Seven Languages for Sale.” O’Toole went in. “What are ye askin’ for the bird?” he asked. “One Dollar, and it’s a sacrifice,” said the dealer. “You’re on,” said O'Toole. “Put the beast in a cage and send ,it .out to Mrs. Ellen O’Toole to the Shamrock apartments on the drive.” Then he continued on his way home, so anxious was he try the parrot out on the language thing, and when the whistle blew he was the first man out. Running home he dashed in upon his wife and exclaimed with face aglow: “Did the bird come, Ulin?” “It did, Dinny, and it’s stuffed, baked and ready for ye, but I’m tellin’ ye, Dinny, there’s no more than a pick on the tiding.” “Ye cooked it?" screamed O’Toole. “Sure,” said Mrs. O’Toole. “ ’Twasn’t to be killed, Ulin,” cried O’Toole. “Sure, the poor green thing was a present to ye—’(was a talking parrot. The bird could spake sivin languages!” “Well, why the blazes didn’t it say something?” came back Mrs. O’Toole. —Montrer’ Herald. THE REASON. rffli ■..A ijf The Temperance Advocate — My poor man, don’t you know that most alcoholic beverages are adulterated? The Drinking Man and that’s why I make it my business to take larger drinks so that I get all of the genuine article that’s coming to me. Not in His Class. Rich Man (from city, visiting at country church) —My own preacher in the city is the Rev. Fashion. You have heard of him? Country Pastor- —Y’es; but we don’t recognize him. Rich Man—lndeed! Why not? 'Country Pastor —He preaches for money instead of vegetables and donation parties.—Puck. Plan and the Man. “Yes, we are going to advertise our goods in a frank and straightforward way. That’s the only publicity that pays. We’ve just hired a new advertising man.” “Who is it?” “J. Babbleton Swope, the famous writer of fiction.” Secrecy. “How do you know the man is an employe of the railway company?” asked one talkative passenger. “Because,” replied the other, “he’s the only man on this train who insists that he hasn’t the slightest idea of what has happened to make us five hours late.” Knew Her Weakness. “So Kitty and Jack have quarreled?” “Yes; she told him that when they meet again it must be as strangers.” “Jack doesn’t mind it much.” “Well, you see he knows that if they meet as strangers she’s bound to start a flirtation with him.” Correct. “Something tells me that you have had 'a dark past,” muttered the seeress. “That’s true,” answered the client. “For ten years I worked in a coal mine.” Not Crazy All the Time. “Blimblock spoke a good word for you the other day, Ginghawk.’’ "That was kind of Blimblock. What did he say about me?” “He said you had 4 your lucid intervals.” Scientific Explanation. “A jokesmith wants to know what becomes of the hole in a doughnut when you eat the doughnut?” "That’s simple enough. The hole remains suspended in the air, but you can’t see it.” A Severe Test. “Penwhiller js a wonderful artist.” “He has a great reputation.” “And richly deserved, too. Why, Penwhiller can draw a girl kissing a poodle and, upon my word, it is still possible to admire the girl.” ‘ See Court Records. "According to one authority, the moon does not affect rhe tide so much as it does the mind.’ “Oh, I don’t know about that. It has often affected the tied who were not tied to each other.” Has a Good Eye, Though. “There goes a man who reads all the time, yet 1 dare say he couldn’t tell us who wrote ‘David Copperfield.’ ” “Well! Well! What ca earth does he read?” ’ “Gas meters ” Going Some. “Is he a smart man?” "Is he? Why I reckon that ‘ man comes pretty nigh knowing as much as a boy of eighteen thinks he knows.* Advice. <' “My cup of joy is very full” sings a! poet. W ell w let it be> gentle one. Don't! try to change places with the cu>r-J Nev Orleans

TRAINING CHILD MIND DISORDERLINESS A THING TO BE CORRECTED EARLY. Responsibility Rests with Mother When She Allows Bad Habits to Become a Settled Thing in the Life of Offspring. If I had only realized when I was a child how much more work it made to have people disorderly and careless about their things I am sure I should have been more careful. But I didn’t realize, writes Ruth Cameron In the Milwaukee Sentinel. That is the oft expressed sentiment of one young woman who has recently gone to housekeeping in a home of her own. And I fancy there are many of us who could say the same thing—we didn’t realize! And not about that matter only, but about many matters. I have heard it said that children are naturally selfish. 1 beg to differ. I think they are naturally full of the most generous impulses. But I do admit that they are naturally thoughtless and that is what makes them seem selfish It is not that they would be deliberately selfish and unkind; it is just that they have lived so short a time that they do not understand the trouble, and pain and self-denial they may be the cause of—they just don’t realize! I once knew a wise mother who grasped this fact and based her training on the effort to make her children realize exactly what they were doing when they were thoughtless or careless or For instance, very matter of which tile young housewife spoke. This mother had a daughter who was terribly sleek about leaving things around She would come into the house and leave her coat on one chair and her fur on another, throw her gloves on the table and put her hatpins on the mantelpiece and only put away her hat because she was afraid something would happen to the feathers if she didn’t. Her mother talked and talked to no avail. Finally she decided to make the daughter realize the trouble she was causing, so she told her that for. the next week she, the mother, would not pick up one thing that any of the children left lying around, that her daughter must keep the house in order as a punishment for past misdeeds and that if she failed to do so she would not be allowed to go to a certain function to ■which she was looking forward. As all :he children inherited more or less a tendency to dlsorderliness from an artistic father, her task was by no means easy. Needless to say, the end of the week found her saying: “I never realized how much trouble leaving things round made. I will be more careful in the future.” Again, when the two older children got the habit of teasing for things that were beyond the family purse, this wise woman, Instead of scolding, simply took them into her confidence about the family income and outgo, asked their help about keeping the accounts, and without saying a word of her purpose to them, soon made them realize for themselves why they could not have everything that other children had. And after that she-had no more trouble with teasing. Look back into your own childhood and see If the unklt«i, the selfish, the thoughtless, the cruel things that you did were not all done because you did’not realize. What better basis, then, could we have for training our children than helping them to realize n<>w Instead of years afterward when it is too late? World Coal Supplies. The British Board of Trade has just published a report in which it states that the total known coal production of the world, in 1911 (exclusive of brown coal or lignite) was about 1,050,000,000 tons, of which the United Kingdom produced more than one-fourth and the United States more than tiro-fifths. As compared with population the production in the United Kingdom was six tons pei head, and in the United States a little less than five tons. The output in the five principal coal-producing countries during 1911 was as follows: United Kingdom, STI.SSO.OOO tons; Germany, 158,164, 000; France. 38,023,000; Belgium, 22,683,000; with the United States at the head with 443,025,000. The average value per ton of the coal taken at the collieries was: United Kingdom, $1,982; Germany. $2,375; Belgium, $2.92; United States, $1,432. The Bargain Shopper. The woman with the so-called bar-gain-counter mania, is the butt of many a joke, though the truth of the matter is, the bargain counter is a positive boon to many households, enabling the woman of great family responsibilities and a curtailed allowance to make one dollar do the work of two. The woman who gleans this harvest from the bargafh counter is a good shopper. She knows exactly what she wants and never buys a miscellaneous assortment of odds and ends simply because they are cheap. She knows quality when she sees it, and never buys inferior goods under the delusion that it Is a reduction. She knows what goods are worth at the regular counters, and thereby is able to discern a real bargain. There are ho regrets for aueh a shopper* but a powerful lot of satisfaction. His Part In the Game. William Faversham was talking modestly about an article on women’s Easter dress that he had written. “If the article made a hit,” he said, “it was because I wrote it calmly, without heat or rancor. I didn't treat this important subject like Spratt “Spratt, you know, said to his bookkeeper: “ ‘My wife brought home a new Eaater hat last evening—one mass of yellow paradise plumes—ninety-seven plunk).’ “‘Bow'd you like it? naked the bookkeeper. TL’Oh, I just raved over it' ■»!<

WOMAN’S ILLS DISAPPEARED Like Magic after taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. North Bangor, N.Y. — “As I haw

used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound with great benefit I fed it my duty to writ* and tell you about it I was ailing from female weakness and had headache and backache nearly all the time. I was latex every month than I should have been

gS — M FL- ’•

and so sick that I had to go to bed. “Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has made me well and these troubles have disappeared like magic, i have recommended the Compound to many women who have used it successfully.”—Mrs. James J. Stacy, R.F.D. No. 3, North Bangor, N. Y. ■> Another Made Well. Arm Arbor, Mich.—“ Lydia E?Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done wonders for me. For years I suffered terribly with hemorrhages and had pains so intense that sometimes I would faint away. I had female weakness so bad that I had to doctor all the time and never found relief until I took your remedies to please my husband. I recommend your wonderful aiedieine to all sufferers as I think it is a blessing for all women.”—Mrs. L. E. Wyckoff, 112 S. Ashley St, Ann Arbor, Mich. There need be no doubt about th* ability of this grand old remedy, mad* , from the roots and herbs of our fields, to remedy woman’s diseases. We possess volumes of proof of this fact, enough to convince the mo’t skeptical. Why don’t you try it?

ALBERTA Bprice cfi beef HIGH AND SO \ THE PRICE OF ITTLE. 'or years tbe Province Alberta (Western nada) was tbe Bl# neb: ngConntry. Many these ranches today > immense g rain fleids 1 the cattle have tp the cultivation ot barley and flax; the aade ruanv thousands _si or Americans, settled on these i plains, wealthy, but It has lui **— creased the price of live stock. H There is splendid opportunity now to get a Free Homestead Os I* o acres (and another as a prePfoNj aJJJ'I) eruption) In tho newer districts ffi'wte •*, and produce either cattle or grain. KM The crops are always good, tbe "Mgißlta-ii ell mate is excellent, schools and <r churches n re convenient, markets '■/Sbjrsplendid, in either Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta. c jriW Send for literature, the latest 'ffi/Arlwultn Information, railway rates, etc., to W - s - nethery, 4 »* MitPSER Bi.nfi, Toi»s», om«. w K/Hlillt Bl<ig.,l>>4LauipoU> a'Jw G‘, iiM or address Superintendent of SVJJ IllW Immigration, Ottawa. Canada. Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’s Why You’re of Sorto : —Hare No Appetite. CARTER’S LIVER PILLS will put you right ERS in a few days. BITTLE They SjIVER j their E PILLS. ; CureCon-j3r yV BmJ Btipation, T | Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL FRICK Genuine must bear Signature j. Your colls positively cannot have Distem- ■ 3 per. Pinkeye, Influenza. Catarrhal Fever or B S other similar diseases if you use Craft's H B Cure in time. If the disease is started it H ■ will not fail to cure in any case. Safe at alhß ■ times and under all condidona. Go to your ■ B Druggist get a bottle B i |S CRAFT'S DISTEMPER CURE I a! ' s 7OU Eet 70ur El00; y back. I ■KeV nhe can’t supply you write us. 3 B valuable Horse Books, fr-e. Write B V*«* RodlclssCo. 2.3 d Jt.Lrfijetts, W.l •f BOURBON POULTRY CURT down & chick's throat cure* gapes. A few drops in th* drinking water cures and prevents, cholera, diarrhoea, and otheitchick diseases. One 50c bottle makes 12 gallons ot ap medicine At all druggists/ Sample and booklet on ‘‘Diseases of Fowls" sent FRML Bourbon Remedy Co. Lvxisgtra, ly. You Need NO “SPRING MEDICINE** If yon keep your liver active, your bowel® regular and your digestion good Regulate the Bowel* Stimulate tfie» Liver Improve Digestton and Purify the Blood b'OR SAGE —4CO A. NEAR EMIIDAGBh. ONTV, Can.; U a. cult., bal. timber. A r. concrete house. 2 barns, outbldgs.. etc. Addr. W. STREATFIEGD, Emedale. P. A. Oet.. Csub. FOR SALE—One of the best Imwreved MS acre lw*rated alfalfa farms in the Pecos Valley of N. Mere excellent artesian well, side and bottom feeervolr, good house. tv»»k r. nmferd, hexter, I. She. FREE TeweUES-HSI’S TABLES are recommended as tbe best local remedy for women’s ailments. Easy to use. prompt: to relieve. Tote tuwi/’frreanrn/, and an article ‘Causes of Diseases in Women” matltdfitt, TNE MM 6BIBAIY, MX I, WARRII, l»A,