Walkerton Independent, Volume 47, Number 4, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 23 June 1921 — Page 2

A bad back makes a day’s work twice as hard. Backache usually comes from weak kidneys, and if headaches, dizziness or urinary disorders are added, don’t wait—get help before the kidney disease takes a grip—before dropsy, gravel or Bright's disease sets in. Docn’s Kidney Pills have brought new life and new strength to thousands of working men and women. Used and . recommended the world over. Ask your neighbdor! An Illinois Case -iy I — O. F. Porter, maDolls & Stery™® <@ Chinist, 916 Sixth St., TS & Rochelle, 1111., says: & ;‘_‘;i\‘,_‘;f “lI had a lame and B s aching back for \{’ JY« {a: months. I tried disSTB A ferent remedies, but Py Ry didn’t get any relief. X iy My back hurt me at v{;; night when 1 got oL through my work, 2 .}i Mornings my back ‘7BB A seemed as lame as wr ever. I used three boxes of Doan’'s Kidney Pills and they removed the pain entirely.” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S 3=y PILLS FOSTER -MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. Death only a matter of short time, Don’t wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking The world’s standard remedy for kidney, Jiver, bladder and uric acid trcubles—the National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Guaranteed. Three sizes, all druggists, Leok for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitetion HERE’S THE LATEST TOY OUT The Little *Kiddie Movie”™ Picture Machine Anychild can operate. Nolights, no danger. i 2 reels of amusing fiictures free with each machins. o end to fun. Suitable for boy or girl sto 15 years. Order to~ day for Christmas. By parcsl post $1.50 complete. THEKIDDIEMOVIE Keys Mig. Co.. East St. Louis, OL, FOR _SALE — IMPFROVED AND UNIMPROVED FARMS and FARM LANDS, large and small tracts, in Gulf section of Alabama. Easy terms. Get you a farm. Tell us what you want. Get Away from Snow and Jce. Come to Land of Sunshine and Flowers. Good roads, good markets, healthful and prosperous country. Address THOMPSON REALTY COMPANY, Box 357, 65 St. Francis Street, MOBILE, ALA. E-Z Dustless-Ebony Stove Polish U E-Z IRoN ENAMEL FOR THE Pire E-Z MeTAL PoLisE FOoR THE NICKEL TRY E-Z SusoE PoLisH SAvEs SmoEs All Dealers—Money Back Guarantee E'l live longer than any other race. - Bulgarian Blood Tea Promotes health and long life. Use it to sweeten the stomach, tone the iiver, flush sthe kidneys and purify the blood. Sold everywhere by druggists and grocers. HOXSIE’'S CROUP REMEDY Has no rival. It is the best and only posie tive, swift and sure cure. &0 centa e e —————————— One Thing, Anyhow. Teacher—Now, who can tell just what is meant by the saying: “All men are created equal?’ We all know that some of us are born with wealith and many other advantages not shared by all. “We are all created with an equal need for clothes,” suggested Johnny. ‘s 2 " Buy only ‘‘Diamond Dyes /\gg}" ALS 4 LK AN e A Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye worn, shabby gkirts, waists, dresses, coats, gloves, stockings sweaters, draperies everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, new, rich fadeless colors. Have druggist show you “Diamond Dyes Color Card.”—Adyv. Many Miles cf Piping. If the water and gas mains which underlie the streets of New York city were placed end to end they would form a continuous pipe line sufficiently long to reach from the Atlantic te the Pacific coast. Cuticura Scothes Baby Rashes That itch and burn with hot baths of Cuticura Soap followed by gentle anointings of Cuticura Ointment. cially if a little of the fragrant Cuticura Talcum is dusted on at the finish. 25c¢ each everywhere.—Adv. Bird’s Power of .ision. A bird’s po I f vision is, on the average, ahout 100 times ¢ er than man'’s, Birds ¢ ! n to fee a4 WO! on fre I ed ground AFTER E ® L2l E E@"mv SOIVINRG B GNEn U R W A LAY g e g:\: 2PO B DA = a8 BXS S %] = B Nk EE S 8 B\ o~ e—- — Y ’,,' y ir— j._:‘,‘r,v,- . g & - CENTS M R TSt 5% ¥ & § ) . B> e ¥ B : :

r Why Some Married Couples Are Not Over-Happy. Chances for Domestic Felicity Great. est When There Is a Marked Dissimilarity in Character. Two young people whom I knew very well recently married, remarks a writer in London Answers. They had each taken a distinctive degree at a university, and, to all outward appearances, were admirably suited to each other. Some time after, when I went to visit them in their new home, I failed to see the suitability. I do not know for certain that they bored each other—l hope not, since they are joined up—but, oh, how they bored me! The atmosphere was laden with knowledge; the eatables on the table seemed spread on a geometrical plan. | Nay, the very jam looked scholastic. : They meant to be very charming, I do not doubt, and their conversation was edifying, but there was an absence of jokes—poor or otherwise—and lightness or gavety was nil . When 1 got outside I longed to see the wind lift the hat off the head of a stout man and watch him chase it in vain, or something—to me—equally funny and undignified, so that I could laugh away the oppression caused by my visit. Ther> was a bit too much “like” in that wedding, I thought. She was a real sweet girl, but I felt as if she ought to have married some good fellow with more love than knowledge in his composition, who would have greeted her with a good hug that would have disturbed her smoothly brushed halr, instead of the cold “peck” she received. He ought to have had a woman who would fearlessly have poked fun at him, as well as having s;irit enough to tell him of his selfishr in taking the most comfortable chair in the | room and appropriating the whole of the fire. True, there might have been | an occasional flash in the pan, but at | least it would have been living and | not collegiate stagnation. ‘ In the days when I used to think | I knew something T remember being | surprised at the choice of a wife made | by a professional friend of mine. It | seemed to me as though he, with all | his attainments had simply thrown | himself away on a demure, domestic " | mouse. “What a companion for him,” I said | to myself. “Why, she doesn’'t seem to have two intellectual ideas in her | head !” , That marriage proved a perfeet sne- | cess, and I learned why, for 1 visited | them frequently. She just adored her clever hushand, and he, coming home in the evening, | often fagged in body and brain, was | glad to find thoughtful consideration | and restfulness. Later, when the | children came, he said, too, that they were brought up and cared for as |only a true mother knows how to T 0%0 nce im&dmflhz like the subject of this article to him. His words in reply are, I think, worth repeating. “If I had married a brilliant or a very intellectual woman I fear my club would have had more of my company. As it is, I turn my steps most willingly each evening toward my haven of rest. You see, after a day in the business arena, a man wants a change, not a new battle—to lay down his tools, so to speak.” I once asked a lady how she had managed to keep her hushand still her sweetheart after so many years of marriage. She replied, with a merry laugh, and her eyes shone quizzically: “John Is such a big, good, serious fellow, quite my opposite, so I expect it is Just the ‘spice 0 the devil’ in me that has a charm for him.” From my little gleanings and experiences I have been brought to the conclusion that the chances of happiness are greater where contrasts of temperament exist than when like marries like. This Fish Makes Nest. The common sunfish is an abundant form in most lakes and rivers from the Great Lakes to southern Georgia, says the American Forestry Magazine of Washington. Doctor Kirkland has given us some very interesting points on the breeding habits of this species which he very truly says “prefers still and clear waters.” In the spring of the year the female prepares herself a circular nest by removing all reeds or other dead aquatic plants from a chosen spot of a foot or more in diameter, so as to leave bare the clean gravel or sand; this she execavates to the depth of three or four inches and then deposits her spawn, which she watches with the greatest vigilance: and it is curious to see how ecarefully she guards this nest against all in!n‘m]urs. In every fish, even those of her own \;'“"il"’. she Sees un!.\' an enelm-\" and is restless and uneasy untit j\!n- has driven it away from her nurs- | ery. ! G L | Japanese Eager for Education. i School days have cominenced aeain | in Tokio and it is more noticeable than | ever how inadequately the country is "»V'i-'."‘~‘.’ with institutions of higher ; arning. Waseda is said to have re- | ceived eichteen mdred applieations %f'n‘!' which there are 150 places in one |of the higher courses. They have over 1. %4 S tiire¢ Do i

| Milli for” . | liions rior a 1 New Stomach i One of the greatest American million- | mires said to his physician, ‘‘ A million i dollars, Doctor, spot cash and no grume : bling, for a new stomach,’’ and then | the sick man groaned and turned away. , All his wealth could not make him ‘ happy or contented, for happiness large- | Iy depends upon digestion. Withous | health where does happiness come inf? ; After all the stomach plays a great i part in everyday life. Without a healthy stomaeh and good digestion our | blood is thin, watery and poor, our | : heart action is weak, our liver does not | do its duty, and man is miserable and i unbappy. Prevent disease by putting | the house in order and strengthening | the system against the germs of disease. f Dr. Pierce, of the Invalids’ Hotel and | Burgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y. | years ago understood diseases and their 1 prevention, and he discovered ecertain roots and herbs which were nature’s remedies, and succeeded in putting them up in & form that could be easily pro- | ' cured at the drug store (liquid or ! tablets). This he called Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. This Dis’l covery gives no false stimulation bej cause it contains no aleobol or any nar- | eotic. It helps digestion and the as- ! similation of such elements in the food | as are required for the blood. It gives | to the blood the food elements the tis- } sues require. For over fifty years it ! has enjoyed the confidence of the l American public. Try it nowl l NG ; ’ ':"'l,’;’s-:: " e- - NF7 P N P\ 7(J ‘ N \ Q) ~b ) O o . \‘r: - A PEGGY coughed for an honr | after bedtime until Mother thought of Kemp’s Balsam. A half teaspoonful gquickly relieved the irritation, after which she soon went to slee ’ KEMP’S BAfiSAM Wiil Stop That Cough s : : e iy L |Cuticura Soap % —— Imparts — ' |The Velvet Touch | |Soap 25¢, Oiotment 25 and 50c, Talcum Zse. ! ' The Funny Man. | Jones met his friend Stimson in the 1 street the other night. ‘ “Hallo, old fellow!” he exclalmed { “How are you getting on?” % “Pretty well, thank you,” answereé | Stimson; “but,” he continued, “I've bsomethlng to say to you—you'll have | to keep your eye open next week.” “How is that?” queried Jones. “Because you won't be able to se¢ | If you dor’'t,” and before Jones coul¢ kick him he was out of sight.—Edin- | burgh Scotsman. S . ':‘.'.‘ & Vaselinez L ARBOLATHE | g ; e | Vas elme | Reg U.S.Pat. Off | Carbolated { % PETROLEUM __LLY | A convenient, safe | antiseptic for home | use. Invaluable for | dressing cuts and | sores. A time-tried | remedy. | ! REFUSE SUBSTITUTES . State Street New York | ey > | v STOMACIE Clven g e | s:,[:':{”‘“9 = . 41y A | <5 T Ay 7 : lt i 77 AT > O"') £/ [ NS S 3 . i ’4 " -,;",-'\'f)"{”—’:a @ 'a.,' - | : (NGt T 00l ‘4/‘/.[B" 7 | : e ‘~~—\S\tL",¢‘f;T/~4'-Eé.V/S/ Get | > \;,s;:?,;: u_»a.-'/ £ S : | J Y :\%“E;\*;)fzfl» -~ .f’ 25’ | =/ Box | B “*P‘m A, 5=G G | RS ieiel I R { bBO A SAN e e ¥y i P 1 ,""5,"1.. UL PN "', 1 2. K 8 ooA # ’) h - i Ly St ) e RS STy N VRN ;Ar@a A ' S B TNEY 2T oBITI R [z 4 s ; - | JEge g 22Y €5 B 8 oA B it | B 0A Y op e Eoe RN Vi i @!,, © D W ‘%E i : RRTRATNTR TR Y e S ! The most dreaded dicease of hum:mlty—-—' | & sure death if not relieved My exjy nee 1d treatment a positive | | relief, Price § My treatment relieved | vhat it ha dor A'“‘, me it will do | (lu\;'ll‘»’ ')‘«:iv-ulmi, Michigan t y ] T Ohildean Ara i * #any School Children Are Sickly | M wers wi 3 ) r own comfort and the - are ir¢ hould never be without | S how M ot} ( Sweet P ,(\~.w1«.1('&:!«”(*().! for Y t he season fhey break up | ‘ ¢ hness nstipation, teeth ng | 11 3 tomach troubles Used | s YRS 'HESE POWDERS | 31V Il 2 All druyg stores. lluu‘ti R - 'f'"'"’:;"“ P "f":gfi‘s‘" , ? et HAIR BALSAM | ) < @i 4 Rer i psHairFalling] ‘ v gt Restores Color and { ; Yoo Bean y and Faded Haix} | e 2 ! Latchopue N. ¥ | 3 \ O ERFUL | o gy i 175A T nd, Fia | _ - | W. N. U. CHICAGO, NO. 48--1920. z

A Wer of Help to Women oF Middle Age From Mrs. Raney. Mo%, Okla.—*“When I was 45 years old Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-

pound bcarried me through the critical period of the Change of Life in safety. I am over 60 and have raised a family of eight children and am in fine health. My daughter and daughters-in-law recommend your Vegetable (gompound and I still take 1t occasionally my-

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self. You are at liberty to use my nemeif you wish.’’—Mrs. ALICE RANEY Morse, Bklahoma. . Change of Life is one of the most critical periods of a woman’s existence. This good old-fashioned root and herb remedy may be relied upon to overcome the distressing symptoms which accompany it and women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to carry women so successfully throngh'this trying period as Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound!f If you want special advice write to Lgdia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (confidential), Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. As One Raised Eatonic Made Him We.l “After suffering ten long months with Stomach pains, I have taken Eflt&%fl am now without any pain what; » *Am as one raised from the dead,” ‘wrltes A. Percifield. Thousands of stomach sufferers report WQrful relief. Their trouble is mfipch acidity and gas which Eat 'glckly takes up and carries out, ring the stomach to a healthy, active condition. Alwayvs carry a few Eatonics, take one after eating, food /ill digest well-—you will feel fine. Big box costs only a trifle with your druggist's guarantee. e e— e . FREGRLES ©oessy s o 8..;2.1‘ Michigan Avenue, Chicago E. % SMOKED FROZE! Za SALTED P2y GREEN BAYFisyi ¢~ e & GREEN BAY,WIS. - S SPICED g = 4 DRIED Intant Marvel. Carter—My baby is certainly bright for a six-months-old infant. Pay*er—How is that? C¢r I took the wife and him to - _9¥es>~the other night -and he started to cry in the saddest part of the pi re.—Film Fun. A Feeling of Security You |naturally feel secure when you know t the medicine you are about to take is| absolutely pure and contains no harmfuf or habit producing drugs. Such b medicine is Dr. Kilmer's SwampRoot, Ridney, liver and bladder remedy. The game standard of purity, strength and exjcellence is maintained in every bottle df Swamp-Root. It is{ scientifically compounded from vegetable herbs. It is 'not a stimulant and is taken in teaspoompful doses. It is ?mt recommended for everything. It is {nature’s great helper in relieving and ovércoming kidney, liver and bladder tro;bles. A swprn statement of purity is with every {ottle of Dr. Kilmer's Swampl Root. If yoil need a medicine, you should have thé best. On sale at all drug stores in bottleés of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to try this grea® preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. Prize, Anyhow. Benham—l don’t think you need any more clothes, Mrs. Benham—l don’t, if you want me to win the prize offered by our soi(‘iety for old-fashioned costumes.— ’ Kansas City Star. Cole’s Carbolisalve Quickly Relieves lnnd heals burning, itching and torturing gkin diseases. It instantly stops the pain of burns. Heals without scars. 30c and 60c Ask your druggist, or send 3¢ to The J, W. Cole Co., Rockford, 111, for a pkg. Adv, This Critical World. It’s impossible to please everybody, and if a girl has what we, in our ig inorum‘o, consider a good ftigure the | neighbor women say she is bunchy.— l()hi() State Journal. } BOSCHEE’S SYRUP 'AHays Irritation, Soothes and Heals ' Throat and Lung Inflammation | The constant irritation of a cough akf‘(‘l‘fl the delicate membrane of the | throat and lungs in a congested con gditinn. Boschee’'s Syrup has been a | favorite household remedy for colds, ?(-(»11g))s, bronchitis and especially for | lung troubles, in thousands of homes ;flll over the world, for the last fifty- | four years, giving the patient a good ;ni;:ht's; rest. free from coughing, with | easy expectoration in the morning. For siale evervwhere.—Adv. i The wise man never bo s Os s knowledge, but the man who th I 8 wise does nothing « | @Girls with pretty taces s " it worth while to act p | 05 f s~ Night and Morning. | //&Z""?{jr‘?i:) f‘iJ"J(' ,"'.'! rong, -.".f.’f}'if:* ¥y & & 7,':'?‘:“\_ Eyes. if they Tir Jtch, | %or AtV 7% Smartor Burn, if Sore, ? oy Irritated, Inflamed or | %UR {_YE_S Granulated, use Murine | often. Scothes Refreshes. Safe for | Infantor Adult. At all Druggicts Write for | Free Eye Book. Muix: Eye Remedy Co., Chicage

T E——— , | ROYALTY FEELS HARD TIMES , I SR y | King of England Parts With His War ' Bonds and Prince of Wales | Takes in Roomers. However discomforting may be this post-war period of adjustment and its | | era of painfully high prices, we may all take some comfort in the thought that they spare nobody, observes the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Prince and pauper, rich and poor, higch and low, | they all go deeper into their purses for | their needs, and their protests and | lamentations have a striking similarE Ity, hinting that there are not so many | differences among men as their rai-,im(-nt and bank accounts might sug- | gest, | Some of us have succeeded in keepling our incomes within hailing dis- ‘\ tance of our expenses and in nudging | up the one as the other ascended; but | not all of us—ecertinly not all of us. | Many a good man is still toiling away jon his job at the old seale, with his | living expenses inereased about 150 per cent since the good old days before the war. | For instance, there is George V of England. George is still pounding away | on his old job at the pre-war scale, and far from being able to pry a raise out of his employers, the people, he has lost several valuable emoluments, And the young prince of Wales, that clever and likeable boy, the empire’s greatest salesman, he is in the same situation as father; living away up and wag-s at the same old mark, with the revenue of his estates considerably lower—why, the prince is raising the wind by renting rooms in Kensington palace at a matter of S4O to SSO a month. Things &re pretty bad for royalty when it gets to that. The prince was intending to buy a shooting estate on his return from Aus-. tralia and hibernate for a time, but that plan had to be given up. ‘ Feathers and long trains have been cut off of evening court requirements, the king's cellar is running low, and he has had to sacrifice some of his war bonds. He took over a generous block of bonds &t a time when a dollar was as big as a cart wheel to Britain, and now he has had to unload at a saerifice, Thousands of formerly wealthy cltl-‘ zens are similarly situated, thon,rzh“ many have not the great merit of personad service that George of England fs rendering. Revenues from investments have petered out or shrunk to such proportions as no longer to furnish an Independent living. A lot of the old boys are sailing pretty close te the wind—the newly poor as differlemintml from the purse-proud newlyrich. Whatever partiality fate may ,hnvp shown in placing men in their , niches in life, certain the post-war sea- { Bon has been rigidly and unbendingly impartial; all men are being jolted in the one spot—the pocketbook. | e ———————————————————————————— \ | Mark Twain's English. There is a superstition among those { who have been educated beyond their intelligence that no man can be a mas ter of English, who does not possess Latin at least, and perhaps French {mlso. 'But this absurdity is exploded by the vital vigor of Bunyan and Defoe, not less than by that of Franklin and Lincoln, Grant and Mark Twain. | And the vitality of Mark’'s English was a gainer also by the faect that to him English was always a spoken tongue: | he wrote as he talked; but then he | was always as careful in his choice | of words when he talked as when he wrote, Brander Matthews writes in Har- | per's. He imparted to the printed | page the vivacity of the spoken word, | its swiftness, and its apparently un"prmnmlitmwl ease. His sentences, never seem labored, no matter how | deeply they have been meditated. In reading them they appear spontane'l ous; and, whatever the toil they may have cost him, they are not stained | with the smoke of the casting or | scratchied with the mark of the file. Self-taught as he was, no apprentice llto the craft of composition ever had | a severer teacher. He so mastered the secrets of our stubborn tongue that || he was able to write it as he spoke it, | with precise accuracy and yet with ; flowing freedom. ; Church Bells’ Peculiar Meaning. | | In a Wiltshire (Eng.) village when a young person died unmarried wedding ‘ peals, with muflled bells, were rung immediately after the burial. There ex‘listed in the parishes of Rutland a custom of ringing the gleaner’s bell in every church at eight or nine in the | morning during harvest time, which ] meant that women and children might go into the fields to glean. The bell 'wns again sounded at five or six, the ,hmn's when no more gleaning was to be done. A church bell is usually |runf.: in old English towns after a corlnn('i"s inquest. At Goddington, Oxford'shin-. there exists a custom of rineine ltlw church bell after a coroner’'s in iqm'sr certifying to the actual death of [ some person in the parish. An Undesirable Citizen. Rev. Harold H. Gritlis of Portiand, Ore., says: “This prosperous citizen (in the parable of ti.e rich man and I!.:l'.x!'u.\') was not dishonest, or licen- | tfous or intemperate. So far as the | record goes, e never stole any money, {“.- never eloped with another man s I\\.m.. He never guzzled any cham pagne. The fact is, this man stood condemned, not for something he did, but for something he did not do. His | erime was that of omission, not that of l‘-““””i\\'ini‘,. He was afllicted with fnmhin: more than the damning sin of | selfish inhumanity.” | ? Birds Affected by Fog. g Curiousiv. although human beinges %.I\l'(' utterly bewildered by a fog, most | animals find their way through it with | very little difficulty. A horse will trot | f(,[,.; o in its right direetion as thouch | the air were perfectly clear, and not nlyv that, but will take the ricght turn | ine at the right moment if it is at all i weenstomed to the road. Birds, on the | other ha d, are utterly bewildered by v ‘ fogs. Pigeons, for instance, will re- | main motionless all day lonz, half g wleep, huddled up in their pigeon- | houses. Chickens and poultry of all E kinds won't stir all the titie a heavy | fog is about. n

S —— - R 3 ¥-' > rea u', P S e s . ‘;?‘\_ 2B £ L E AR B cel g = ey 0 BN R AR, | e(= RN eBT ‘YRR R ERAY: U-=less you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 21 years, and proved safe by millions.—Say “Bayer”} l [3“ e & ANTT= r : F : &7/ 4L/ i e A sy & - X | = / S » i l = k SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an “unbroken packags" of genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” which contains proper directions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American! Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets eost but a few cents—Larger packages. ! Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicaci@ | Easy to Guess. | Weil Fitted. “Did you ever have the telephone| “That boat is nothing rut an old bell ring when you were in the bath- | tub.” “Isn’t it all the better fitted tub and there was nobody else at|for the wash of the sea?” home?” ; e L “Oh, yes,” replied the family man. [ Probably the most serene situation i “What did you do?” in life is not to have to “manage” any- | “Well, I play a little golf and I have | body. inlso addressed a few remarks to a | e punctured tire, so draw your own con-| Love is what keeps a man sick a clusions.”—Dßirmingham Age-Herald. I long time after he gets well. Kill That Cold With CASCARA QUININE L, G : FOR % s OQ' AND Colds, Coughs oM+ La Grippe Neglected Colds are Dangerous Take no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneeze. l Breaks up a cold in 24 hours — Relieves Grippe in 3 days—Ezxcellent for Headache Quinine in this form does not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic Laxative—No Opiate in Hill's -@@ OO OO O O . 90” N DON'T LET THAT COUGH CONTINUE! ’ =N\ SPOHN'S DISTEMPER COMPQOUND O o Will knock it in very short time. At the first sign of a cough — 4 = or cold in your horse, give a few doses of “SPOHN’S.” It will » & D gct on the glands, eliminate the disease germ, and prevent further A destruction of body by disease. *“SPOHN’S” has been the stand- @ a " O ard remedy for Distemper, Influenza, Pink-Eye, Catarrhal Fever, 4, NS ‘lB Coughs and Colds for a quarter of a century. 60 cents and $1.20 be co per bottle at your drug store. R SPOHN MEDICAL CCMPANY, Goshen, Ind,

e ———————————————————————— e Variety the Spice of Meals. “A man shouldn’t always eat the same food; he should vary his meals,” said the man making conversation. °* “That’s right,” answered the seedy looking chap. “Then you vary your meals, I take RE “Sure thing. Some days I get two meals, some days only one, and some days I get none.”—Yonkers Statesman. Catarrh Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ- ! enced by constitutional conditions. | HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is a Tonic and Blood Purifier. By cleansing | the blood and building up the System, | HALL’'S CATARRH MEDICINE restores normal conditions and allows Nature to ' do its work. : | All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. 1 | KING HAS SUPREME POWER’ But There Are Reasons Why British Monarch Does Not Exercise His Royal Prerogative. If the king did all he might do without exceeding his royal premgmive} the nation would be startled. He can | veto a bill passed in both houses; he | can dissolve and summon parliament; | he can select or dismiss his ministers; : he can declare war; he can make | treaties and create peers; he can ap- l point bishops, g vernors and judges— | and all “on his own.” He could cede | the duchy of Cornwall to a fnreign? | power, disband the army and rmvy,g | and sell the dreadnaughts and navn]l §stnros. He could give every govern- | | ment official, from the highest to the | ilowost. the “push.” could pardon all | i eriminals, and could stop the whole | i machinery of government. But there | { {s an unwritten law of common sense, | fortified by long usage, which makes it | %umhinknhle that the king should do | ithe-se things; and in the last resort, | which is never likely to occur, the | king, being a constitutional monarch, | reigns by the will of the people, and t could be deposed by act of parliament. ! | —Montreal Herald. | —_————— ‘ i He Knew. ! Teacher—Edwin, what is the best ! time for picking apples? i Edwin—When the farmer ain’t look- ! in’.—Pßoston Transcript. . ] Literal Depression. i ! “Are his spirits low?” | | “Well, he has the deepest cellar I | ever saw a private stock put m.” i

| RIS DS A TR AT "‘@wmm%amfiww AATRITS e B rape=Nuits : 5 The Cereal - ! Xt a{ hat Needs o Sugar at Neeas o Sugar | =V t 3: . ) & { & Healthful, substantial and J full of sturdy nourishment. i A food of delightful flavor, 5 eatable to the last atom. & & : . 3 3 Sold by grocers everywhere / : 8 3 % E SRR RRS T AR SeyRS TT S L L S B SN Braß

Sleste g Lo R ee S Not Persuaded. “What are the prospects for getting a little loan this morning?’ asked the impecunious caller. “Not a chance,” snapped Mr. Wadleigh. “Oh, all right. It’s a fine day, sir.” “Maybe it is, but I'm not one of those weak-kneed individuals who helieve in the old saw, “The better the day, the better the deed.’”—Birmingham Age-Herald. Important to Mothers i Examine carefully every bottle of | CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the . Signature of 427 | In Use for Over 30 Years. I Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria iTREE HAS “CANDY” FLOWERS Indian Product That Rivals the “Gingerbread House” of the Remem.bered Fairy Tales. We have all read the story of the l “gingerbread house” in the fairy tales. {\\'oll, there is a family of trees in | India that have “candy” flowers, or 3 the next thing to it. These trees are { known as the “Bassia” irees, and of ithe three important kinds, two have | sugary flowers and the third is called | the “Indian butter tree.” The petals { of the flowers are rich in sugar and 'drnp from the tree in the early morniing. They are picked up by the womien and children and are spread out |nn mats to dry in the sun. A single | tree will furnish 300 pounds of flow- | ers in a year. When fresh, the flowers | are very sweet and taste much like sics. They are eaten fresh or cooked .v,irh rice, shredded coconut, or fiour. | The seeds of the butter tree are fulil | of oil, and this oil is used to make a | kind of butter, and alse for seap and | candles.—Popular Mechsnics Magazine, i She Would, of Course. ! “Where are you going, Maggie?” | asked Lizzie. Maggie. “Are yvou going to have gas?” | “Well, rather,” said Maggie. “You | won't find me sitting in the dark with { no strange man.”—Houston Post | e e | | As dull as the debates of Dutch bur-